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                  <text>Now You Know
. . ·
'

•

~

by Course &amp; :Millie

.A MANDA PANDA

~-----

.·

.

VOL. XXIV NO. 113

LIKE: M'l
ELECTRIC

Girl on
Bike Hit
...TE-LEPHONE.,
· WKICK I \JSE To
CALL '/OlJ.

T'is FoRTREES

..t'is FoR11-{ETRONK

WHE:RE WE SWI N&amp;
IN THE- BREEZ-E'-,
AND ...

FRIENP· LOUISE.!

RUTLAND - A 13-year-old
Rutland girl escaped serious
injury when struck by a car
while riding her bicycle
Saturday on County Road 3,
one and two tenths of a mile
southeast of Forest Acres
Park, the Meigs County
Sheriff's Dept . reported.
Theressa Fish was riding
with two other girls, single file.
Frances R. Nelson, Rutland,
was traveling southeast, the
same direction as the girls.
There was another car in front
of Nelson. As the first car In
line passed the girls, Theressa·
swerved toward the center of
the road in front of the Nelson
car. Mrs. Nelson applied her
brakes. bul was unable to stop
in time.
Theressa was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
by her parents where she was
treated and re leased. No
MICKEY CHILDS
citation was issued.
FOR
NIXON - Mickey
At 4:30 p. m. on private
Childs, son of Mr. and Mn.
property in Rutland Twp.,
Russell Lee Haning, 17, Rt. 2, Bill Childs, Middleport, has
Albany, was riding a motor. been elected to serve as
cycle in a strip mine area when "youth chairman for
his rear wheel hit a hole Nixon." Mlck has some but
ca using him to wreck. Haning needs more young workers.
Those interested In sup·
was taken to Veterans
porting the Nixon campaign
Memorial Hospital by private
car where he was treated and are asked to contact his
residence to leave their
released.
name, address and phone
number. Mlck, who Is al·
LOCAL TEMPS
lending
Ohio
Slate
Temperature in downtown
University,
will
get
In
touch
.
Pomeroy Monday at 11 a. m.
on weekends. Ameeting llate
wa~ 75 degrees under cloudy
will be announced.
skies.

OF M'/ 000D

Mammp
Xnows !3es t CAIN'T SURVIVE
SLEEPLESS

SO THAS5 WH'/
HE HAIN'T GITTIIII'
HIS REG' lAP.

TONI GHT WE
S INGS'EvRY
SHJ.IOUD 'lAS
·'" ''·'•' .. " A S!LV£ R
:;:.,.....;..li. LlN I N0 '"-

"WELL. B£ \A/AI TIN'
FO' ' /0 '- ~
IN m'SWEET - .
B'/E /lN'BYE.:.

14-HOURSO'
51-.EEP!f

J'

.. .
- Tf.\E'I IS A
SPIRITED TRIOBUT THE'/ NEEDS

A TENOR TO

By United Prell International

PEKING - CHINESE PREMIER CHOU EN·LAI hosted a
lsvtsh banquet tonight for Japanese Prime Minister Kakuei
Tanaka and used the occasion to remind his guest that the
"unfortunate" past has not been forgotten but should serve as an
Incentive for achieving better relations between Japan and
Otina .

ISA FINE.
TENOR -SAME

ASME!!

MAKE IT INTO A -.. n~'

FINE. QUARTET-

SAIGON-U.S. TROOP STRENGTH IN VIetnam dropped

N-..,!,.,.

by 400 men last week under President Nixon's withdrawal

program to a total of 36,100. It was the lowest lAlla! since April 30,
1965, when 36,000 American servicemen were here.
The total does not include 39,000 men aboard ships In the 71h
Fleet offshore, 49,000 airmen In Thailand, or 20,000 ainnen In
Guam. The overall total shows 144,500 American servicemen and
women directly Involved In the IDdochlna war.

THE- JOB HS'!?

CLEVELAND - A LABOR UNION representing 3,600 city
workers, one-third of Cleveland's work force, set up picket lines
early today In a strike designed to force the city to make good on
fringe benefits negotiated during the term of former mayor Carl
B. Stokes but never paid.
The striking union is LocallOO of the American Federation of
State CoWlty and Municipal Employes, and nearly everyone on
the city's clerical staff. Police, firemen and the Cleveland
TraMil System were not affected, but unions representing 6,000
other city employes were expected to honor Local 100 picket
lines.
· Law Director Richard Hollington said the city ha4 contingency plans set up to operate aU departments, but declined to
elaborate.

by Crooks &amp; Lawrence

CAPTAIN EASY
BE I~ G

WEl-L -E'R:-1 THINK THE' TITLE'
Ml?s; VA~ CLEAVE' CONFERRED ON HIM

PAID A HL'GE S AL-ARY FOR'?!,..
AND WHAT, PRAY TE'LL1 AREHI7 OFFICIAL f)lJTIE.$ ~

WAS. E)I..ECUTIVE VICE Pf(E51PENT
AND CHIEF FINAWCIAL II~VI~ER!

W115H!

GALLOPI "-1' GUPPIES~
MY WI FE~.

'l;;m'ii!'

I

SHUCK?! ?HE
.JU?T WAt-JT? ME
T'·FEE!.; AT HOME:·It-.1 THE OOG•

HOIJ$El

ME..,OSEPIENCf'-

WA&lt;;;H,

DA~Ut-JtS1

'/01.1 CAN'T l.t:;T
t-IE~ TE:A~ '/OJJ
AWA'/ l-11&lt;.13
THI~1

60TTHAT
l HAVEN'T

GOHl

TEN CENTS

Plant, Mines ·to
Get Full Review
Tenth District Congressman Clarence E. Miller today announced In Washington a special federal taskforce for the
economic development of southeastern Ohio will hold a public
meeting at 3 p.m., October 3, In the Meigs County Courthouse In
Pomeroy to discuss future growth and development of the Meigs,
Gallia, wid Vinton Counties area.
The taskforce, in cooperation with the Buckeye Hills Hocking Valley Regional Development District and the Ohio
Valley Development Commission, is coordinating a major intergovernmental program of solving anticipated situations
associated with the impact of the Gavin Power Plant and Meigs
mine developments and maximizing the beneficial application or
governmental resources in taking advantage of these developments.
Miller said that prior to the sui ling firm which is preparing
Pomeroy meeti ng the !a- an economic development
member Taskforce will con- analysis of the impacted area
duct a lour of the area affected for the Federal Regional
by the Gavin Plant and Meigs Council in Chicago, will
mines.
present an interim report on its
James Peterson, regional survey.
director of the Economic
Ali interested parties are
Development Administration, encouraged to attend the
is chairman of the Taskforce, meeting and participate in
which includes officials from discussions.
the Environmental Protection
Agency, the Ohio Office of
Representative Miller stated
Economic Opportunity, the that "The taskforce will be
Department of Health, here to let the local people
Education and Welfare, the know what is being planned for
Depariment of Transportation, the area and what is going to
the Farmers Home Ad· happen in the next few years as
'ministration, and the Ohio this
major
economic
Department of Development. revitalization effort moves into
Each representative will high gea r. But most imdiscuss the role his agency will portantly, the taskforce is here
be playing in developing the tu get to better kn ow the area
three county area.
and people and listen to what
A Washington, D. C. con- the people have to say."

Extremism Bad
WASHINGTON (UPI) Sen. Hubert H. Hwnphrey, DMinn ., believes the Democratic
party will not win elections if it
gives the appearance of being a
special interest party ,
representing only college
campuses, militant youths and
racial minorities.
"If we get the image of being
a party that has gone to extremes - getting ourselves
identified with what I call the
esoteric issues - if your image
is one of extremism as people

people view its leadership as
catering to a small group, "and
we should."
"The only way I know that
you can win elections is to
recognize that the majority of
lhe American people are not
poor, there there is what we
call middle America and that
.
'
IS made up mostly of working
people," Hwnphrey said. "And
that great middle section
represents victory or defeat for
a political party."

see it, then we can't win,' '

ERROR&lt;:;ORRECTED
In a recent accident report
involving Margaret Fields,
Pomeroy, It staled there was a
passenger In the car with Mrs .
Fields. This was In error . Mrs.
Fields was alone.

Humphrey said Sunday.
He made his remarks in an
interview published in U. S.
News &amp; World Report.
Humphrey
said
the
Democrats willloee elections if

DONALD DIENER, administrator of Veterans
Memorial Hospital, left, welcomes 0 . H. Koeplln, Athens,
director of the Seven County Emergency Medical Services of
the Ohio.Valiey Health Services, and John Reardon, national
project director, in Pomeroy Monday morning .

Pat Will Brag
About Husband
WASHINGTON (UP!)- Pat
Nixon says she is going to .start
boasting about her husband
"because I've got the best guy
in th e world and I Jove him
dearly" .

She made the remark over
the weekend on the plane tha.t
carried her back to WashingiA&gt;n
at the end of a week-long,
cross-country campaign trip.
Mrs . Nixon had never spoken
more personally or glowingly
about her husband or their
relalionship.
"I have news for you," she
said, "you can't name any field
In which we're not better off.
The people know this. They're
not dwnb. They're upbeat.
They'renot pessimistic. I think
this is great."
She added, "Look back four
years ago ... the campus
disorders, the burning of the
cities. There's been lots of
change. We've never had more
change in such short a lime ...
under this great President. I've
got to love him . He's great."
When reminded that there
still was a Vietnam war after

SACRAMENTO, CAUF.- A VlNTAGE JET fighter taking
off at an air show smashed into a packed shopping center Ice
cream parlor Sunday, kllllng 22 penoll8, many of them
youngsters attending a little league football celebration.'Ano!her
16 persons were Injured when the privateiy-&lt;lwned F86 Sabrejet
barrelled across a highway, struck t)ree vehicles and bounced in
a "ballofflre"lnto Farrell's Ice Cream Parlour.
"I'm sorry ....l'm sorry. Get tile people out," groaned!
Richard Bingham, 36, Richmond, Calif., pOol of the plane. He
was pulled from the wreckage while 200'acreamlng children and
adults fought to escape flames that turned the Gay-008 style shop
Into an Inferno. Bingham escaped with aome broken bones and a
cut face from what a National Transportation Board invealigatGr
said could ''Well prove to be the blggeit diaaster of. this type
I•

WASHINGTON - SEN• .GAYLORD NEUION, D.·Wla.,

WHAT

PHONE 992-2156

Impact of Gavin

WASHINGTON -DEMOCRATIC CAMPAIGN chairman
Lawrence F. O'Brien and Republican National Olairman Robert
J. Dole agree the break-in at Democratic headquarters has failed
to excite public interest.
But O'Brien SWJday accused the Justice Department of trying
to ''Whitewash" the Incident June 17 in wl!Jch five men were
caught with electronic gear alii phoiA&gt;graphic equipment In tile
offices of the Democratic National C&lt;llllllittee in WashingiA&gt;n's
Watergate office complex.

ever."

· H~~HE

,
Devoted To The Interests Of The Meij(s-Mason Area
POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1972

Mostly cloudy, warm with
showers or thundershowers
likely today and Tuesday.
Turning cooler west Tuesday
afternoon. Highs today and
Tuesday in the 70s and lower
80s. Lows tonight in the 603.

Development Taskforce to Show Plan
For Future in Meigs, Gallia, Vinton

Too, AND...

TRAtr:-L.

enttne

..

TbBE0tNS ToAD
AND ToAD&lt;;TooL,. ·

IS FOR

•

.

a1 y

A rainfall of one inch over
one acre of land is equivalent to
27,1~2 gallons or 11'/4 tons of
water.
·

Weather

contends tar increases are Inevitable, COIIIIdering the growing
national debt, and that Pnsldent Nixon'a admlnlatratlon 1s
"playing political games" by mUlni promJaea to the 9onlrary.
Nelson said Sunday that when a liD to ralae the ceiling on the
national debt reaches the Sell!lte floor, he will offer loopholeclOiing ~that would nile fC2 billion in tues fnln
corporallaaiiiA tile -!thy betw... - IIIII 1980. Nelson's
· CCGntln,ied on Pap 10)

far

'l1IE DRESS ADOLL CX&gt;NTEST, ll)e Mm~d tiqle, Is being sponsored by The tii'!Den
Bank an&lt;l Savfn8s Company. The bank has 144 doljs that may be pieked up at the bank any ..
time. Adoll must be returned to the bank by Nov. 20 for judging; II then will be plaC)ld on
display in the bank'slobby from Nov. 20 to Dec. 11, later lA&gt; be given to organlzatioll8 for needy
children for Christmas. A~ bond will be given In each of the following categories, sensible
dress, special category "bride," character c01twne, nationality doll, bncy dre,ss, knit and
·crochet. An overall grand prize of a $50 bald will also be awarded. Shown with three of the dolls
Is Mrs. J011me Williams, employe of lbe bank, One hundred and twenty dolls were distributed
llli¥Nr.

nearly four years of the Nixon
administration, she said: "No
one was killed last week." a
Mrs . Nixon said she had
"never once boasted about my
husband or my family" but
"lately .I've decided I'm going
to have to."
She disclosed that she was a
Democrat once "because my
parents were". She said she
voted for Democrat Franklin
D. Roosevelt once but switched
lA&gt; the Republicans in 1938.

Band Wheels to
Pop Tune Music

AtEHSGame
Pop
tunes
provided
background music for the
Eastern High School Band
halftime show Friday night.
Playing "Overtur e From
Tommy" the band entered the
field in a block formation, the
rear half of the band moving to
the sides, then upfieid to
overtake the front part of the
band doing peg-leg half steps.
The band then moved into
two company fronls in British
kick-steps.
Going into concer t formation , the band played "The
Stripper" with Debbie Jeffers,
head majorette; Vicki Spencer, Cheryl Kuhn , Louann
Newell and Joanne Fick
presenting a dance routine .
The band executed a
precision marching drill
beginning in two company
fronts back to back on the 5a.
yard line. The routine closed
with three company fronts to
exit from the field. Playing
"South Rampart Street
Parade," the formation included squad drops and pinwheels. Charles L. Willis is
director.
HURT BY BULL
The Pomeroy E·R uoit was
called ~Y ~t 10:21 a.m.
to lhe..?"~lanley, Sr.,
residence . oa Geld Ridge
where Mr. Slaaley, Ill, had
beea injured by a bull. He
was takea to Veterans
Memorial Hospital wtiere he
was admitted and was In fair
.condltloo today- suffering
laceration ollhe head, arms
aad legs. The bull attacked
bin! Ia I fi,ld.
. .
··.. : . -:::··.·.·.·

Washington
Concerned
"Be reassured that we are concerned on the federal level "

Jotm Reardon, project director of the five national emerge..;y
Medical Services Demonstration Projects, said In Pomeroy
today.
Pomeroy was the first of several stops for Reardon who will
be visiting the seven counties of this area Involved In the
emergency medical services program over the next two days. A
contract now exists between the Ohio Valley Health Services
Foundation, Athens, acting for the seven counties, and the Health
Services and Mental Health Administration of the Department of
Health, E;ducation and Welfare in the amount of $3.6 million to
aid in the development of emergency medical services.
Representing Ohio Valley Health Services FoWJdation were 0. H.
Koeplin, director of E.M.S. for the seven coWJty area, and Daniel
J. Uoyd, director of program development.
Speaking informally, money is being asked for to
Reardon pointed out that the allow planning, training and
program involved now is for a implements lion of programs.
three year period designed to He said some communities feel
provide upgraded emergency that emergency medical
medical services through the services are beyond their
use of local services. He said financial ability. In this contha t residents will be asked for nection, he said in some cases
support and involvement in the where emergency medical
program, particularly in the services exist, a study will
completion of information and disclose what level of the
data which at the end of the services must be improved.
three year period will provide
Meigs County has several
in formation to other com- emergency squads which are
munilies across the nation on considered an asset in the
what directions they should go program.
in develop~ent of improved
The seven-county area of
emergency medical services. which Meigs county Is a part
At present, the federal was chosen as a demonstration
program is not up for matching area because of the many
funds. Such a system would be developments going on. The
detrimental if the purchase of agency felt that it is a gOO&lt;'
vital equipment should be held investment area for this reason
up while residents attempted to and can provide a formula
raise local matching funds, which may be repeated in the
Reardon said. A wide ranged establishment of programs for
program will be used to inform other areas.
other communities on how
A question and answer
emergency medical services session brought ou t that
ca'n be developed after the pilot funeral directors are losing
program here has been carried money on making ambulance
out, Reardon said.
runs and are not anxious He pointed out that It is a even unwilling - to continue .
massive task to coordinate the
It was pointed out that 31
federal gove rnment in the ambulances are being ordered
program, adding .that more through the EMS program in
the seven county area which
will, in time, take on the duties
of transporting emergency
patients to hospitals.
The discussion brought out
that an ambulance for Rutland
is tied up in a group of nine
such vehicles which have not
A deer was killed In a high- been ordered beca use of
way accident at 6 a. m. Sunday exhausted state funds.
on Rt. 7, four-tenths of a mile However, Reardon assured
north of Rl. 248 in Meigs those at the meeting thai the
County.
matter will be looked into since
According to the Gallla- such tie-ups tend to kill local
Meigs Post State Highway enthusiasm.
Patrol, the animal ran into the
Attending the meeting
path or an auto driven by Dana besides the three officials were
B. Jooes, 36, Rl. 2, Guernsey, Donald Diener and Scot Lucas,
Ohio. There was minor damage admlnislraor and assistant
to the auto.
administrator of Veterans .
Asecond mishap occurred at Memorial Hospital ; Joe
11:30 a . m. on Rl, 338 at Letart Struble, Pomeroy emergency
Falls where vehicles driven by · squad; Russell Mills; Midpoyle Quinn, 55, Racine, and dleport emergency squad;
Ralph E. Rose, 28, Racine, Homer Baxter, Ewing Funeral
collided. Quinn was charged H.ome representative; J8llll!ll
with having defective brakes. Simpson of Rawllngs.coata
There was madera~ damage Funeral Home, and Tom
to bolh vehlclel.
·
~rtin, Martin~ H0111t.

Deer Killed
In Route 7

�2- Tht Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Sepl 25, 1972

IDITORIALS

Project 'Find'

WIN AT BRIDGE

'The Art of
Guessing
Right'

"Who's Responsible for the
Unauthonzed Bombings?11

In DPcember 1971 the Wh1te House Conference on
Aged fu.;ussed attention on the fact that many older
Americans suffer !rom nutr1honal deflc1enc1es because
of their llm1ted mcomes At the same t1me federal food
ass(stance programs are available m VIrtually every
l;ilUnty m the nat10n
As a result of the conference early in August a nat10n
wide campa1gn to ldenllly and enroll those older Amer
NORD!
lean~ ehg1ble for food assistance was launched
453
Four ~overnment agenc1es and the Red Cross were
106
enlisted lit the effort wh1ch mcluded the mallmg or appll
.AK8543 2
cation cards fo more than 26 m1lhon men and women
410
recewmg Soc1al Security benefits 22 5 million of whom
WEST
EAST (D)
are over the age of 60
'
.1086
.QJ72
The agencies are the U S Department of AgTiculture
.82
.KQ974
Off1ce of Economic Opportumty Social Secunty Admims
•
QJlO
!ration and ACTION. the governmenllc1tizen service
.Q7532
.A86
corps
SOUTH
Named to head the campa1gn-Pro)ect Fmd- was Dr
.AK94
Arthur S Flemmmg chairman of the White House Con
¥A 53
terence on Agmg and former secretary of Health Educa
•
76
tlon and Welfare
.KJ94
In announcmg the proJect Flemmmg said Many
None vulnerable
older persons lost to society are eligible for federal as
West
North East South
s1stance pro~rams but are not aware of 11 It 1s the role
Oble
of PrOJect Fmd to locate these people and build a bndge
Pass
3
t
Pll!s
3
NT.
between them and soc1ety
Pass Pass
Pass
F1rst returns of the project are now m
Opemng lead-• 8
Before the month was out I 355 000 cards from the
direct rnaihng had been rece1ved from people who felt
they were ehg1ble for food asSIStance (It is expected that By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
the total number of cards Will reach two mllhon )
The cards are bemg processed by computer and the
Oswald
Our old friend
names returned to Red Cross chapters across the nation
Er1c Jannersten of Sweden
So far some 270 000 names have been returned and more has wntten a book entitled
than 3 000 volunteers have been trained and are m the The Art of Guessm~ Right
f1eld to make contact w1th the people who sent tn the at the Bnd~e Table
cards As many as 50 000 volunteers will eventually be
J1m
H1s theme 1s that
enrolled
your opponents Will help yu 1
Th1s 1s a mass1ve volunteer effort says Warren guess nght if you pay allen
Dunn Project Fmd coordmator lor ACTION And 11 t1on to their bids and plavs
1s workmg as planned
Oswald The hrst hand 10
the book shows how you
should pay attentiOn to lhe1r
b1ds and the opemng lead
Twenty years from now mothers Will be a mere
Jim
A and R 10 our
spec1alty group m the Umted States says Jeanne Bm
code word ARCH which
stock a soc1olog1st at the University of Massachusetts
stands for Analy1e the lead
Th1s state of affa1rs will not result from the women s and Rev1ew the biddmg con
liberation movement but from economic factors and tech
vey the same message
nolog1caJ change she predicts m an article in appropri
Oswald
South analyzes
ately The Futumt magazme
that eight of hearts lead IS
AN EXHffiiT WITH
Modern medicme s success in reducmg mortality has the top of nothmg He plays
RODGERS AND HEART
resulted m an overproducllon of people she expla1ns
dummy s 10 and lets East
Women s hb movements are really a consequence of hold the tnck Wllh h1s queen
NEW YORK (KFS) - R1chard Rodgers
technological change They have appeared at the histon
East shifts to the s1x of was 70 last June and m this good year always a
cal moment when a shar~ reducbon In the occupahonal clubs
fine year to have DICk Rodgers around there
group known as mothers 1s mandatory
J1m
Now
IS
the
lime
to
We are forced to face the fact that 1f we do not take rev1ew the b1ddmg It IS p&lt;Js has been a senes of salutes to thiS prenuer
from women their role of mother and replace It w1th slble that East opened the popular composer whose body of musical work
something else we will be throttled by the overproduc
b1ddmg Without the ace or w1U stand forever in the hiStory of the lighter
lion of bab1es We thus face the need to demand that the
arts Broadway owes D1ck Rodgers an un
ancient and honorable occupatiOn of motherhood fall into clubs Possible but mosl 1m collectable debt and certainly Broadway today
probable East may also hold
disrepute and that women commit themselves to other
the club queen but you don I needs h1s nurustrallons as at no tune m 1ts
occupations
need a lot of club tr1cks history But Broadway has nussed the bus and
Women must be liberated to enjoy the frulls of other
What
you need 1s to play the 11 IS 5th Avenue wh1ch has caught the limousme
occujlllttons, whetl1er they want to be or not 1Emphasis
nght
club
now You hop up
hers)
w1th
the
kmg
or clubs and 11 and honors th1s remarkably unharruny man
As ~ s1dehght to th1s prediction 11 Is mterestlng to
DICk Rodgers IS not modest he knows what
holds
note that Ralph Nader whose mterests seem to have no
he
has
contributed w1thout trumpetmg 1! nor IS
Oswald
Now you a1 e
limit p.red1cts that by 1976 the nation s 200th anmver
ready for the mopping up be humble he has a delightful perspective as to
sa~I 'Women will no longer be wearmg cosmellcs We II
You can try to collect seven hiS place 10 contemporary mus1c H1s
llave ended the h1gh pnonty we put on that kind of ac
diamond tncks but you don t demeanor his Brooks Bros sh1rts neckties
Uv1ty
need them so you s1mply
Don t say you weren I warned lades And gentlemen
play a d1amond and duck m shoes choiCe of motor cars h1s gentlemanly
dummy The best the defense manners hiS sollc1tude for the feelings of artists
can do IS collect lh1s d1a failed or fabulously successful hiS gentle
rnond tnck the heart tr1ck candor h1s weil camouflaged busmess acumen
already won and two clubs his total attributes make hun umque-espec1ally
but you are sure of your cqn
among popular composers Dick Rodgers
tract
current 70th birthday salute IS a tastefully
(HEW5P4PER. EHTIRPRIS! ASS,..
totally encompassmg exhibition m his honor
By' Helen Bottel
housed m the HaUmark Gallery at 5th Ave and
56th street It 1s a one-man Hall of Fame lracmg
The
b1ddmg
has
been
a fantashc career (Including the few failures)
GffiL WHO CAME TO DINNER
West
North
East
South
from mfancy to h1s septuagenarian honors plus
Dear Helen
?
his f1m1 plans not to abandon melody~tarved
An old lriend of ours mtroduced us to his girl !r1end who
You South hold
seemed perfectly chamnng When they broke up she needed a .AK85 ¥AIOZ t K~3 4AJ6 theatregoers as he prepares several new
proJeCts There are photos of Dick growing
temporary place to stay so I took her in lor a couple of days
What do you bad
up of beautiful wife Dorothy who has known
which extended to three weeks I
A-81d one 4: I u b Wath 19
Dick
smce he was seven The1r children tbe
She finally found another roommate but she left me with a hich card points you are too
strong
to
open
one
no
trump
playbills
of early disappomtments his earliest
_,long-distance telephone bill She also borrowed $40 from me
and
whether
or
nol
you
btd
and three dresses she hasn t returned I learned today she hit my rour urd m a j o r s you should collaborations w1th U&gt;renz Hart (Dick was 17
fiance up for a Joan too In all she owes us about $150 It's been open this hand With the mmor Larry 24) startmg w1th the typically sweet
clever Any Old Place W1th You which
lour months
SUit.
Rodgers Hart zealots remember for 1ts
She has a job and doesn t pay rent or food (her new
TODA Y'S QUESTION
You do bad one club and your rornanhccrlSpness and the final Jines, I d go to
'roommate is a man) so she could alford to pay us back But
when I ask her nicely she makes me feel cheap, as II aU I think partner responds one d amond Hell For ya or Philadelphia Any old place with
What do you do now?
you That was 1919 and was not surrounded w1th
of is money The other day she said the secret ol success in ber
Answer tomorrow
a
hit production mfactRodgers &amp; Hart weren t
new affair is that they never hassle over finances It s too
to have that Hit until 1925
grubby (Her new bl thinks shes wonderful doesn't know
It s all there on the HaUmark wails and m
about her freeloading past )
glass cases the playb1Us the first manuscripts
Without leeUng grubby how do we get our money back • theatre posters water colors of stage settmgs
NEEDS IT
Has Keen Nose
costumes sketches of Dick Rodgers
The nme banded armadillo correspondence w1th famous people (the letter
Dear N I
usually
forages at mght from Edna Ferber concermng a play D1ck and
Without ACTING grubby you may never get your money
plowmg mto soft sod w1th 1ts Oscar Hammerstem produced but did not write
beck A moochers line of defense is Nice people don't nose Its keen sense of smell
The Happy Time IS a crusty corker the
discllSS dirty old money so knock off the niceness and tell this fmds Insects s1x mches be
gentle
unpudence of one from Fred Allen IS a
gal the next bill you present will be to herhoyfriend - H
low the surface and digging
With powerful front legs 1t twinge that Fred s funnybone isn t here still to
+++++
nicks out a long sticky be tickled others are poognant nostalltic
Dear Helen
tongue to capture tasty honest and none tasteless) Three small
My husband is a str11ght meat and potatoe5 man He doesn t morsels
screens offer scenes from
Rodgers
Uke change If I try different meals even another kind ol meat
rather than beef steak or roast a ngulllhed screams arise
Yet the other day he informed me that' variety is the spice of
Wile and I should read up on those sex manuals because the
same old thing gets dull
I don I consider myself dull (he doesn t either, really!)
We get along great But Helen this made me wonder How come
a man who wants the same old dinner every night m the year
Isn't happy with the same old wile d1tto&gt; - NOT AN
ACROBAT

Television Log
MONDAY SEPTEMBER 25 1n2
6 00 - News 3 ~ 8 10 Truth or Consoq 6 News13 News 15
H~thayoga 3
6 30 - NBC News 3 ~ 151 ABC News 6 CBS NeWs 8 10 Folk
Guitar 33 I Dreom ot Jeannie 13
7 00 - Elec Co 20 Nows6 Truth or Consoq 3 BeatThe Clock
4 Clrcusll3 Insight 33 What s My LineS Saint 15
7 30 - To Tell The Truth&amp; Traffic Court 10 Episode Action 33
Parent Game 3 Hollywood Squares 4 Young Dr Kildare 8
Movie

"J

.9

1 00 -

I.

Do Away with Motherhood?

I

,. Helen Help

Us.

••

DR. LAWRINCII. LAMB
The Opposite Is True

Tarzan and the Huntress

I

Focus on Columbus 4

200 - News4
2 JO- News 13
TUESDAY SEPtEMBER 26 1972
6 00 - Sunrise Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - F~rm Report 13 Farmtlme 10
6 20 - Paul H~rvey 13
6 25 - Faith For Today 13
6 30- Columbus Today 4 Bible Answers 8 Concern &amp; Com
ment 10
6 45 - Corn~ob Report 3
6 55 - Flintstones 13
7 00 - Today3 4 15 CBS News8 10 News6
7 30 - Sleepy Jeffers 8 Romper Room 6 Bullwlnkle &amp; Rocky
13
8 00 - Capt Kang~roo 10 New Zoo Revue 6 13 Sesame St 33
Timmy &amp; Lassie 6
8 JO - Jack La La nne 13 Romper Room 8 New Zoo Revue 6
9 00- Paul Dixon 4 Phil Donahue 15 Romper Room 8 Con
centratlon6 Friendly Junction 10 BenCaoey 13 Mr Rogers
33 What Every Wom~n Wants to Know 3
9 30 - ToTelltheTruth3 Jeopardy6 HazelS
10 oo- Dinah Shore 3 15 Dick Van Dyke 13 Jokers Wild 8 10
Hathayoga 33 Columbus Six Calling 6
10 30 - Concentration 3 15 Phil Donahue 4 Spilt Second 13
Price Is Rlaht 8 10
11 oo-SaleoftheCentury3 15 Love American Style6 Gambit
8 10 Password 13
11 30 - Hollywood Squares3 4 15 Love of Life 8 10 Bewitched
6 13
12 oo - Jeopardy J 15 Password 6 Bob Braun s 50 so Club 4
Jackie Oblinger 8 News 10 13
12 oo- Jeopardy 3 15 Password 6 Bob Braun s so 50 Club 4
Jackie Oblinger 8 News 10 13
12 25 - CBS News 8
12 30 - 3 WsGame3 15 SplttSecond6 Search for TomorrowS
10
1 00 - News 3 All My Children 6 13 It s Your Bel 8 Green
Acres 10 Walch Your Child 15
1 30 - 3 On A Match 3 4 1~ Lets Make A Deal 6 13 As The
World Turns 8 10
2 oo - Oays of Our L ves J 4 15 Newlywed Game 13 Mike
Douglass 6 Guiding Ll~ht S 10
2 30 - Doctors3 ~ 15 DatngGame13 EdgeotN/ght8 10
3 00 - General Hosplta/6 13 Another World 3 4 15 Love Is
Splendored Thing 8 10
3 30-0neL/IetoLlve6 ReturntoPeytonPiaceJ 4 15 Secret
Storm 8 10
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame 51 33
Love
Amer can Style 13 Merv Gnttln 4 Fllntslones 6 Gilligan s
Island 8 Movie Desert Leg ion 10
4 25 - Sports Club 6
4 30- I Love Lucy 6 Pett coat Junction 3 Oanlel Boone 13
Merv Griffin 8 Andy Grlff1th 15
5 00 - Dick Van Dyke 15 Merv Griffin 8 Mr Rogers 33

films mcludlng TV s hlStoTlc V1ctory at Sea
adroitly composed to underscore the patr1ohsm
w1thout jmgolSIIl and the whole exhibition
takes 1t proper title from one of his own songs
which for the purpose of the exhibition IS most
appropnate because he wrote both words and
music The Sweetest Sounds We got to the
exhibition two hours early on purpose or
course durmg 1ts official hours it was jammed
With friends and the press TV cameras and
uncounted strangers who remember better to a
Rodgers song whose hearts and sp1rita had
Tarzan 13 Ponderosa 3 4 Daniel Boone 6
been lifted at hearmg h1s compos1tions One
5
30Marshall Dillon 15 Elec Co 33 Dragnet 8 Gomer Pyle
hundred of his most famous hit songs are played
13
constantly on a hidden sound system Joe 6 00 - News 3 4 8 10 15
Bousard was and will be at the plano between 6 30 - News 3 4 15 6 8 10 I Dream of Jeannie 13 Growing
Up 33
the Gallery s twin staircases Monday through 7 ooHim
- News6 10 What s My Llne8 Elec Co 20 Andy Grltt/lh
Friday between 12 30 and 2 30 p rn to g1ve !be
15 Beat The Clock 4 I ve Got A Secret 13 Truth or Con
sequences 3 Saint 15
long lived Rodgers standards a live per
Masterpiece Theatre 33 This Is Your Lie 3 OoctMs On
forrnance he s good and plainly loves the 7 30Call 4 To Tell The Truth 6 Pnce Is R•ght 8 10 Seal The
Rodgers songs
Clock IJ
8
00
- Bonanza 3 4 15 Temperatures R s ng 6 13 Maude 8 10
D1ck s f1rst song Dear Old Wigwam
8 30 - Hawaii F ve 0 8 10 Movie Moon ot The Wolf 6 13
isn t herein reproduced from his cache of more
Video Variations 33
than 1 000 melodies and hundreds of hits He 9 00 - Bald Ones 3 4 15
9 30 - Movie Deadly Harvest 8 10 Marsh~ II U Sports 33
wrote 11 at 14 - at c9JOP
10 oo - NBC Reports3 4 15 Morcuo Welby MD 6 13 Firing
Line 33
The Hailrnark exh1b1tion IS convenient for 11 00 - News Weather Sports3 4 6 8 10 13 15
11 JO - Dick Cavett 6 Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Vlrg nlan 8 Movie
browsmg and we browsed all alone to our
They Mode Me ACnmlnal 10 Movie River of No Relurn
memory s content
13
1 00 - Your Health 4
There are countless lists of fine
I 30 - Nows Weather 4 Local News 13
songwT~ters and they are a heady hammy,
happy breed Dick Rodgers breaks the mold !If
most of the rest You could get Mack Gordon,
who wrote scores of hila to sing his entire
repertoire m the nuddle of Bdwy at high noon
Even Irvmg BerUn would sing a hit or a new
ditty at a hint and as someone said about lr
ving s srnaiJ vmce You gotta hug him to hear
BY PAUL CRABTREE
him J Fred Coots will sing his Santa Clauals
Psssing reviews and conunents on other new shows of the
Commg To Town in July for you or 'Two
new
TV season
Tickets to Georgia in Harlem Sammy Cahn
M A.S.H 8 p.rn , CBS
wl11 do an hour of his latest songs and toss in a
It would be unposslble for a weekly ser1es to generate the
parody about yourself for no recompense except
his exhibitionism George Gershwm at any pungency IITeverence and comedy which made this Korean
party elbowed the hired pianist from his bench War medical story a smash movie hit
I waan t around during the American Revolution nor the War
and played brilliantly his own songs An
of
1812,
but I have a feeling that there s always been a bit of dark
even~ With Gershwin IS a GershWill evening,
Oscar Levant said and Oscar, after he played a hnrnor surrounding American men at war - men !rom a supmedley of his hits would play a Gershwin posedly egalitarian SOCiety thrown Into the rigid caste system of
evemng while George romanced a new g1rl the milltary There have been dozens of comedies based on the
Frank Loesser played his songs at parties in the theme from World War II alone ranging from Phil Silvers
Gershwm if not so gifted manner betimes audacious Sgt BUko to McHale s Navy to Hogan s Heroes ek
finding out how he might manage to take over ek
So what makes M-A.S.H so different•
the show s souvenir book concession or
No
much II the season premiere is any Indication
somehow mvade any casbsble aspect of his
ln fact McHale s Navy did essentially the same thing -and
theatricals\ Harold Arlen sang his own songs
did
II
better a decade ago
without ha11lliWless But never in our hearing or
Oh it had some good Unes, as the lower echelon persoMei
research did or does D1ck Rodgers Probably
at the Korean base hospital plotted against their superiors to
because every else does
throw a big raffie and party all for a good cause (helping their
Koren houseboy to attend college)
And there was some respectable acting but the cast, frank
ly, Is too big at the moment Identification with characters was
difficult becau'le the producers evidently asswned everyone
tuned In haueen the movie, and could take It from there
Somehow, I just can I get very much In a funoftlld-games
mood about a show based on the fun and games of those sent
over!lells to minister to young Americans (and the youth of other
nations) who are wounded and maimed in combat Sorry but M
A.S H is no 8-M A.S.H where I m concerned
Maude 8 p m Tuesdays CBS
Maude Edith Bunker s cousin is a spin-off from the
tmued boiling will not ehm1 heart and increases the rest
nate the caffeme Therefore ing heart rate as do all trernendously.fumy All in the Family starring the In
the actual coffee that you nerve stimulants It has the stltuttonalhed American Archie Bunker
descnbed contams calfeme opposite effect of tranqulllz
Archie Is outspoken belligerent has a beautiful daughter a
and 1f It has been boiling for ers In susceptible people it spouse he seems to dominate - and Is a hardhat lower-middle
hours Without added water can cause irregularities of
to d1lute 1t, 1t can contain a the heart Caffeine causes class c1111.1ervatlve
Maude is outspoken belligerent has a beautiful daughter, a
the stomach to Increase the
great deal of caffeine
amount
of
acid
pepsin
juice
apouae
she seems to dominate - and Is a hardheaded, upperThe habit U1 Mexico of
drinking coffee with milk it produces and may cause middle class liberal
(cafe au la1t) as you de indigestion ' burning ol the
Give me Archie, any time Msude may play in my political
scribed 1t of course dilutes stomach' and it can Irritate pasture -but that sjustaboul her only redeeming quallty
the coffee a great deal It the bowel particularly In in
The fantastic success ol Archie Bunker lies in the fact that
decreases the caffeme con divlduals who are susceptl
ble
to
Irritable
colon
or
ner
he's a genuine human being -wrong-headed, under-educated
tent m a smgle cup to about
one third the amount ob- vous colon Individuals who and often bigoted But, being genuine, he evokes in us a 11)'111·
tained m a normal brew as have trouble utilizing ordln pathetic chord We enn feel a little sorry for him when he justly
surning that you used one ary coffee usually tolerate geta his COille-uppance for some or his lar.out rlghtlit Ideas
third brewed coffee and two the decaffeinated products
Alter aU, the guy worka hard for a living, does the beat he can lor
thirds boiling m1lk The cal very well
thoee he loves, and came by his prejudice&amp; and hatreds naturally
IHIWIPAPIO IHTIRPRIII AIIH)
floles WhiCh impart the na
vor to coffee are usually
and h111eatly He's Wl1111g, but he'a real
h a r m I e s s Decaffeinated
Maude Is pre tenUous She 'I)Outa the buzz-wcrdl and phra*
commemal coffee products
Send your quntlooJ to Or Lomb or enlightened Uberallam glibly, and she's not credible when she
then contam calliole and In coro of thlt _,pq,.r , 0 ,.,
tannin and usually have no 1$51 ~odoo C•tr Stllfoon Now Yorl does 110 -just a little obnolious Msude alao gets the edge on
slgmf1rant effect on the N Y 10019 Foro co, of Dr Lomb 1 Archie becauae she lsn 't poor or poorijo«&lt;ucaled - she just
body unlike c alfelne
boollot "' boloMti ~lot JMI4 50 halll't bothered to have an oripllllllaqht In twenty yell'll
Caffeme stimulates the ctnh to tltt ••• ftlrtu tlltd ••k Whatever II' In" with the Ill!• It, •ptblra, geta a knee-jerk
nervous system and the f101 "lolon&lt;H Dltf belllltt
poaltlve reactlon from

&amp; THINGS

Boiling Won't Nix Caffeine

Dear Not
Maybe your husbarxl could counter will' this quesbon (in the
llpir1t ol good clean banter naturally) How come a wile who
loves to cook ''different rearranges furniture at the drop ol a
aof&amp; arxl probably nags her man into buymg new sulta just when
lhe old ones are getting comfortable leaves her change-ability
at the bedroom door• - H

By Lawrence Lamb, MD
Dear Dr Lamb - Our par
ents lived In the southern
part of Mexico the Yucatan
state Early In the morning
they prepared a big pot of
coffee-just
plain ground col
Dear Helen
They never knew about
Please no hedging Are you for N 0 W or H 0 W( The finrt, fee
instant coffee and that pot
of course ls the women s llberat1on organlzaUon The second is full of coffee was kept near
an(i.llb Happiness of Womanhood 'It emphasizes that women the fire for many long hours
11re happiest doing female things and they should leave the Msn s
They used to invite every
one commg to the house to
World to the men
have a cup of coffee The
What s your stand • - WANTS TO KNOW
coffee was always slowly
bolling Our people never
DearWfK
complained about the caf
I'm a NOW type (but not a member) who beUevea the lelne In coffee
''lfapp~ of Women" is the freedom to choose whatever Ule
You may have noticed that
!bey~,beltpure homemaking, totaldedlcatlon tocan!el', or In the packer s directions for
preparing coffee they say
a \Yidable mlxqu-e
boil the coffee We
never
lliil4puih for equal pay,equalrecognition to PERSONS (not
presume
the reason has
menly femala), the Natl01111l OrganlzatlOII for Women makes
aornethlng to do with the fla
,reucNble demands The rights It aaka will help th01e who need vor What we would hke
them, and lheywon tharmthoaewhofeeltheydon t
to know Is by balling the
Ub«atlon &amp;imply mea111 Women no longer need to be coffee lor a long time be
lore drinking It say 15 min
!141~;,ecl What 1110 frightening about that• H
utea or more can this ellrnt
P.S II! qther W'OI'dl, 'Un and let lib!'

nate the ev1i effects of cal
feme and make the coffee
harmless' We must say by
the way that we seldom
drmk black coffee It IS usu
ally half or one third coffee
and the rest boUing milk
We don t think much of
caffeine free coffee and
would rather have our own
method to make 1t free our
selves 1f that 1s possible
Dear Reader - There are
three main mgred1ents In
coffee The caffeine wh1ch IS
a drug and belongs to the
same group of drugs as am
phetamme&amp; commonly called
speed calf1oles respons1
ble for the flavor and tannin
which Imparts a b1tter taste
to coffee The caffeme and
caffioles go Into solution
just below the boiling point
and the tannm enters solu
tion at the bOiling pomt or
above You re correct then
m assurnmg that the direc
lions not to boll the coffee
is to protect 1ts flavor Con

13

8 OO - Gunsmoke8 10 Rowa and Martins Laugh In 3 4 UFO
6 Baoeball 15 Mind ot Man 33
9 00 - Heres Lucy 8 10 Movie See No Evil 3 15 Pro
Football 6 13 Movie Dead Run 4
9 30 - Doris Day 8 10
10 00 - Bill Cosby 8 10 State otthe University Address 33
10 30- Human Dimensions JJ
11 00 - News3 4 6 News 8 10 IS
11 30 - Dick Cavett&amp; Johnny Carson 3 • 15 Movie 8 Movie
Beauty and the Robot 10
12 00 - News 6
12 30 - Movie R~whlde 13

111•

3- T~P~ily Sentinel, Middleport Pcmeroy, o.cSept 25,1972
·~

.

the Sports

Namath Has Big Day Bengals On
Top, 15-10

By JOE CARNICEW
UP! Sports Write•
By Chet Tannehill
Joe Namath d1do t guarantee
11 this time but he did g1ve a b1g
hint
Three years ago m January
· 1969 Namath guaranteed
A couple of boys one obviously m high school the other the New York Jets would beat
probably juruor high were walkmg down the hill Friday mght the Baltimore Colts m the
toward U&gt;gan s commercial center after the Marauders' 13-8 Super Bowl and he went out
VICtory over the Ch1eftams
and led h1s club to an upset
There were other U&gt;gan mourners of what recently had VICtory
transpired massed and moVIng along the sidewalk The con
Butthatwasthelasttunethe
versat10n SUitably was muted alter all how gleeful can you be Jets defeated the Colts until
alter your team 1s tbe VICtim of a 60-yard bomb thrown and Namath changed 11 all Sunday
caught for a wmmng touchdown w1th just 1 27lert m the game•
Durmg the week he was
AMarauder fan was close enough m the group to overbear asked II he would go to a short
the older boy say to the younger My dad told me tbat Pomeroy passmg game aga1nst Balli
coach would beat the hell out of us
more s zone defense the best
Such IS the reputation of Charles Chancey one-lime Pomeroy
m the National Football
High School head football coach and after a stmt at the college League No not necessarily
level (Marshall U assiStant) coach of the Marauders since 1967
be rephed There are times
Coach Chancey IS the first to admit his team maybe dido t you can go long agamst a
beat the H- out of U&gt;gan, but his squad won the game and zone Then he broke into a big
earned 11 the hard way That IS by sticking w1th the defense and gr~e showed wbat was so
offense they had been coached to use even though down 8-7 and funny Sunday as he bombed
the clock all but ran out
away lor SIX touchdowns and
'These k1ds have somethmg special mused Chancey 496 yards enroute to a 44-34
thoughtfnlly after the game over the traditional cheeseburger
triumph over the Colts
fmsandseveralcoffeesatCrows (w1thMaryathlss1de)
Elsewhere m the NFL
They don t qu1t They keep commg at you They re used to Sunday Mmnesota drubbed
wlnnmg they JUSt won t admit they cant wm
Detrmt 34-10 M1am1 npped
That s your 1972 Marauders mostly a green mexper1enced Houston 34 13 Washmgton
squad of a few semors numerous )Umors and several stopped St U&gt;ulS 24-10 Dallas
blue nbbon sophomores certam to be heard from more
held off the New York Giants
m the future
Nobody not even Kenny Braun (Mulberry Ave ) IS pred1c
ling a champ10nsh1p thiS year But I agree w1th Kenny and Coach
Chancey that (I) the Marauders aren tout of It yet and (2)
Nat1onal Football league
they II have something to say about who IS champion

Desk

'

23 14 Cmcmnatt edged P1lls
burgh 15 10 San D1ego
npped Denver 37 14 Oakland
edged Green Bay 20-14 New
England upset Atlanta 21 20
Ch1cago tied Los Angeles t:l13 Buffalo stunned San
Francisco
27 20
and
Cleveland whipped Ph1la
delphia 27 17 Kansa s C1ly 1s
at New Orleans tomght
Sub Dave Osborn scored
three touchdowns as the
Vlkmgs downed Detro1t for the
runth consecutive time Osborn
had TD runs of one and 14
yards and caught a 13-yard
sconng pass from Fran
Tarkenton Tarkenton also
passed 40 yards to John
G1ll1am for another score
Jun Ki1ck scored a pa1r of
TDs and Larry Csonka Mereu
ry MorriS and Bob Gnese had
one each as the Dolphins
remamed unbeaten by r1ppmg
Houston Dan Pastonm threw
82 yards to Charhe Jo1ner for
an Oiler TD
Larry Brown set a club
career rushmg record and
Washmgton s defense scored
one TD and set up another as
the Redskins beat St Lows
Tom Fr1tsch s three field
goals one a 54-yarder helped

l)nUas beat the Giants desp1te
long TD passes of 94 and 55
yards from Norm Snead to
R1ch Houston
Horst Muhlmann kicked !1ve
field goals to account lor all the
Cmcmnatl sconng as the
Bengals downed the Steelers
John Hadi threw two TD
passes and Mike Garrett ran 41
yards lor another score to lead
San D1ego over the Broncos
Jack Tatum s record 104yard return of a recovered
fumble sparked Oakland past
Green Bay
Carl Garrett ran 12 yards lor
the gG&lt;~head score nudway
through the last period and the
Falcons Bill Bell blew an easy
m-yard field goat attempt w1th
28 seconds left as the Patrwts
mpped Ailanta
Mac PerciVal s 45-yard field
goal m the last penod earned
Ch1cago a lie w1th the Rams

Jun Braxton scored tw1ce 1n
the fourth period as Buffalo
upset the Forty Nmers
Mike Phipps ran for one
score and threw 23 yards to
Frank Pitts for another to lead
Cleveland over Philadelphia

Weekend Football Scores, Standings
Standmgs

THE 15-YARD PENALTY ASSESSED agamst Me1gs w1th
less than a mmute to go m the game g1vmg U&gt;gan a l1rst down on
about the Me1gs 30 could have been disastrous Fortunately 11
wasn t Fans who saw Coach Chancey riSk a penalty by gomg
onto the field to argue the penalty knew somethmg had to be very
wrong It was Let me explam
The Situation was thiS
U&gt;gan had a screen pass set up quarterback Kemper mtendmg to hit 210 lb fullback Ken CUlbertson behmd the !me of
scrlnunage near the nuddie surrounded by a screen of blockers
The rule book - as Coach Chancey demonstrated to the offiCials
after the game - exphc1tly states that in such a formation the
defense IS pernulted to tackle any offensive back behind the line
of scnrnmage whether or not he has the ball Aod offensive
linemen are permitted to block downf1eld (not as pass rece1vers
but as for a ground play from scrunrnage) This rule bas been m
effect since 1969
The Marauders Alan McGioughlm bne backer had been
mstructed to tackle Culbertson behmd the Une when he saw the
screen setting up That IS exactly what Mr McGloughlm d1d so
elfechvely the ball moments later beirg thrown to the b1g
fullback but harmlessly because Alan had a good hold on him
But wa1t Down came the red flag Holdmg sa1d the
referee the other officials concurrmg
Their decillion was maintained at the time and Chancey
already having InVIted another 15-yd penalty lor gomg onto the
field retreated praymg and determmed to clarify the ruUng
alter the game because as he sa1d, I ve been teaching my boys
to defend against the screen that way and 1! I m wrong I want to
know 11
At the time of the ongmal ca 11 and later m the post mortem
after tbe game the off1c1als l1rst argued the mfraction was for
holding When the rule was cited they S81d CUlbertson was
beyond the line of scrliJUnage (thus theoretically) making the
call legal as if the play were a standard 'forward pass The
fact was the olflclllls did not know whether or not Culbertson was
beyond the line They did not nag the spot of infraction then
check to see exactly its location
Chancey s perfectly log1cal pomt was that if Culbertson were
behind the line the tackle (or holding) was legal And that 1!
Culbertson were beyond the line of scrliJUnage U&gt;gan had to be
penalized lor having illegal receivers downf1eld (the Unemen
blocking downfleld) thus olfsettmg penalties and loss of down 1
When all this was thrashed out after the game three of the
four officials agreed fully w1th Chancey and the fourth - to be
left urudenlifled - agreed that Maybe I made a m1stake
And that fnends IS one or the fme pomts of this highly
technica I art of coaching football

Umted Press International
Nat1ona I Conference

Eastern

DIVISIOn

W L T PF PA
2 o 0 51 20

Dallas
Wash r g ton

2 0 0 48 31
I 0 20 27

St Louos

1

New York G1ants

0 2 0 30 53
0 2 o 23 55

Ph lade/ph a

Central Drvts1on
W L T

M nnesota

PF PA

OHIO COLLEGE
FOOTBALL RECORDS
Un1led Press International
M1d Amencan Conference
Conference All Games

KentSiate
Toledo
Western M ch

Mam
Oh o Un v

1 I 0 55 34

Green Bay
Delro I
Ch cago

Western

1 I 0 40 30
1 1 0 40 50
0 1 1 34 50
DIVISIOn

W L T

PF PA

2 I 0
1 I 0

0 1 0

1 2 0

Oh1o Conference
Conference All Games

WLT WLT
2 0 0

Los Angeles

1 0

1 I 0 54 30
de berg
2 0 0
1 I 0 57 42 He
8aldw n Wallace

New Orleans

0

I

0

14

Amenca n Con terence
Eastern DIVISIOn

PF
0 0 54
0 0 85
I 0 51
1 0 28

W L T

Mam
New York Jets
Buflalo
New Eng and

2
2
1
1

Balt more
0 2 0 37
Central D•vrslon

27

0 0 0
0
0

SanFran

AI an Ia

1 47

WLT WLT
100 200
1 0 0 I 1 1
0 0 0 2 1 0

Bowl ng Green

34

PA
23
58
61 Oberl n
51 Wltenberg
54

W L T PF PA

C nc nnatr

I 0
0
0
0

Kenyon
I
Ma 1etta
1
Den son
0
Mount Un on

0 0 0
0 0 0
0 0
0 0
0 I
0 I

2
1
2
2

0
0
0
0

0
1
0
0

I I I
0 2 0

0 1 1 0
0 1 0 0
0 0 2 0
0 0 2 0

17 Cap tal
I 1 0 44 43 Oh1o
Wesleyan
C eve and
I 1 0 37 43
0 1 0 1 1 0
Houston
0 2 0 30 64 Otterbem
0
2 0 0 2 0
Western DIVISIOR
W L T PF PA
Oak and
I I 0 48 48
San 0 ego
1 1 0 40 48
Others
Denver
1 1 0 44 54
w L T
Kans C ly
0 1 0 10 20 Ashland
3 0 0
Sunday s Results
Bluffton
2 0 0
New England 21 Allanla 2U
W lm ngton
1 0 0
Cleveland 27 Ph ladeIph a 17
1 0 0
Oh o State
Oal as 23 New York Gants 14 x F nd ay
1 0 0
San Diego 37 Denver 1.4
H ram
1 0 0
M amr 34 Houston 13
Dayt on
2 I 0
Los Angeles 13 Ch cago 13
Xaver
2 I 0
Mmnesota 34 Detro t 10
Akron
1 1
New York Jet s 4A Balf1more 34 Def1an ce
1 1 0
Oakland 20 Green Bay 14
John Carrol
1 1 0
C nc nnah 1S P1tfsburgh 10
Oh10 Northern
1 1 0
Wa shmglon 24 St Lou s 10
1 2 0
C ncmnat
Buffalo 27 San Franc1sco 20
Central State
0 I 0
Mondays Games
Case Western
0 2 0
Kansas C ty at New Orleans Voungslown State
0 2 0
In ghll
x - Does not nclude Monday
(Only game scheduled)
game

P llsburgh

2 0 0 46

Wooster
Musk ngum

0
0
0
0

Falcons In Driver's
Seat After Big Win

Browns Claim
First Victory
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) Nick Skorich remembers
disastrous afternoons m
Philadelphia
He had enough of them as
head cosch of an Eagles team
that plummeted from the
championship of the National
Football League m 1960 to last
place in 1962 and 1963
Skorich returned to Philadel
phia Sunday as head cosch of
the Cleveland Browns but
disaster didn t come back to
haunt him The Browns pickup
up the1r first triUmph of the
season with a 27 17vlctory over
the Eagles
Cleveland actually accorn
pUshed the destruction durmg
a 57«CD~~d span late in the
second quarter, when they
jumped from a fl.J edge into a
2lJ..3 halftime bulge by converting two turnovers Into touchdowns OveraU the Eagles
overshadowed the Browns 20 to
15 in finrt downs and 314 to '1m
in total yardage
~arterback Mike Plupps
ran off left end in the third
quarter for a 27-3 lead enough
to hold off a late Eagles surge
Skorlch said hla Browns went
~ in eiblbltions and lOBI the
seaaon's opener to Green Bay
because they surrendered too
many turnovers, arxl defeated
the Eagles because ''football Is
a prne of give and take '
Brown Uneblcker Jolm
unpn 1oo11 It any from the

Liske pass m the end zone on
the Eagles l1rst dnve The
Eagles gave 1t away nudway
through the second quarter
when Liske threw a screen
pass mto the hands of defensive
end Bob Br1ggs ins1de the
Philadelphia ~yard line Two
plays later Bo Scott plunged
from lbe one to make it 13-3
The Eagles also gave It away
on the ensuing kickoff when
rookie Pat G1bbs fumbled on a
runback that left him with torn
knee legarnents one of 10
Philadelphia mjuries wh1ch
mcluded AI Nelson s broken
nose Phipps hit wide rece1ver
Frank Pitts on a 23-yard third
down pass for the TD
Briggs said his mterceptlon
was the twmng pomt of the
game
'I wasn t there by accident
he said "From reviewing
game films we knew that when
the Eagles tackle cut his
blocking short It would be a
screen, and I got in position for
It
Eagles Coach Ed Khayat
sold Liske s arm began
bothering him during the first
half so rookie John Reaves
carne on in the third quarter
The N0 I draft chOICe
promptly rallied the Eaw1th
a
20 yard
gles
TD
pass
to
ltarold
Jackson and scored on a oneyard sneak Jackson, who
entered the game as the
Elllel by --~·· ...... leape'1 leading receiver,

o.r.

By GENE CADOES
UP! Sports Writer
Coach Don Nehlen of
Bow llng Green IS homes1ck
The Falcons picked up the1r
second straight wm on the road
Saturday a 16-7 devis1on over
M1am1 m an early show-down
game m the M1d AmeriCan
Conference but face two more
away games before meehng
Kent State at home Oct 14
Saturday s v1ctory coming
on the heels of a 17 14 upset of
Purdue the week before put
Bowling Green m the dnver s
seat m the MAC IItle chase but
Nehlen sa1d I don t even want
to thmk about the rest of our
schedule
wh1ch mcludes
bes1des four conference
games Tampa and San D1ego
State
In Saturday s other Mid Am
game Kent State led by fresh
man quarterback Greg Kokal
scored 28 pomls m the second
half to bury Ohio University 37
14
The Flashes now I 1 1 on the
sdded seven catches for 131
yards
The Eagles held on the ensuing series and Bill Bradley
returned the punt to the
Browns 20 In position for a
touchdown that would have
puiled the Eagles to within 27
24 But Reaves was racked for
an etght-yard loBS, and reliable
Tom Dempsey was wide on a
short field goal try for the
second time in the game
' I never missed two Uke that
before Dempsey said I
have an idea what went wrong
bit 1 Will t say whst I'll have
to look at the game films to be
11\n I'

year an d 1-0m the MAC scored
two touchdowns w1thm 15
seconds m the th1rd quarter to
overcome a 14-9 deficit and
then added two more m the
fourth to make 1t a rout
Kokal a 6-1 170-pounder
from Euchd who IS only 17
years old threw two touch
down passes one of 17 yards to
Jeff Murray and the other 47
yards to Eddie Woodard and
set up another w1th a 60-yard
run
At Toledo Joe Schwartz
returned from quarterback to
his old tailback spot ran for 188
yards and three touchdowns to
lead the Rockets to a 311-24 wm
over Texas-Arlington
Schwarz who started the
first two games at quar
terback camed a record 39
limes and scored on runs of 2S
I and 2 yards It was the
Rockets second v1ctory
agamst one loss th1s year and
their 37th wm 1n their last 38
games
Xav1er taking advantage of
Cmcmnati rn1scues picked up
Its first wm m f1ve years over
the cross town nval Bearcats
With a 19-7 deciSIOn
Unebacker Bob Ries in
tercepted a pass and recovered
a fwnble both of which were
turned mto scores by the un
derdog Musketeers
Dayton w1th a record four
f1eld goals by freshman Greg
Schwarber leadmg the way
rolled to a 39-0 v1ctory over
Marshall Schwarber kicked
f1eld goals of 2S, 22, 41&amp;nd 40
yards and miSSed tries from 23
35 and '1:1 yards away
Tailback Walt Wingard
scored twice on runs of nine
and two yards lor the Flyers,

Saturdays
Oh10 College
Football Results

Game Cancelled
The M1egs Logan reserve
game scheduled Saturday
mght at Marauder Stadium
\las cancelled due to a miX
up 10 time schedulmg
Logan came tu Pomeroy

early m the alternoon
thmkmg the game was
scheduled for alternoon
Logan refused to wa1t or to
make another tnp to
Pomeroy Game lime had
been set at 8 p ru
The Gall1pohs Jackson
reserve game which began
at 7 30 p m •us called
midway m the hrst quarter
because of a heavy elec

trical storm With the score
0-0

Rose After

200 Hits;
Reds Win
HOUSTON (UP!) -Now that
the heat IS oil the Cincmnati
Reds Pete Rose can concen
Irate on gettmg 200 h1ts this

We played better m our first
exhibitiOn game than we
played today Bradshaw who
scored the Slee lers lone touchdown on a 12-yard run, corn
mented We were JUS! louay
Noil and Bradshaw also were
m agreement that a fourthquarter pass to flanker RoiUlle
Shanklm 1n the end zone should
have been a touchdown The
offiCial ruled that Sbanklin was
out of bounds
Never Complained
I d1dn t thmk there was any
questiOn about It bemg a touchdown
Bradshaw srud
I
couldn t beheve 11 when they
ruled hun out of bounds
Linebacker Bill Bergey who
calls the Bengais defensive
s1gnals sa1d the defense
never complamed when
repeatedly called up&lt;Jn to hold
the Steelers after the offense
gave the ball up through
fumbles and mterceptions
Last year that sort of thmg
would get us down and we
never seemed to be able to
come back he sa1d Now we
JUSt go out and do the job

season

Rose h1t h1s !90th and 191st
Sunday as the Reds thrashed
the Houston Astros 10-2
Kent Slate 37 Oh10 U 14
The wm wrapped up two of
Den1son 37 Jun ala ( Pa ) 7
the three games of the week
Kenyon 13 Wash ng ton &amp; Jef
end
The f1rst cornmg Friday
ferson 13 (t e)
mght clmched the Nat1onal
Ash and 51 Edmboro ( Pa ) 7
Mount Un on 25 Grove C1ty League West title for the Reds
IPa I 0
The Reds followed that Wllh
H ram 46 Obert n 1.4
a
7 I loss on Saturday They
Allegheny IPa) 17 John Carroll
7
were Idle today and return
Wooster 23 Alb on IM ch ) 0
HI sda le (Moch ) 26 Oh10 home Tuesday mght lor the
start of a senes w1th Atlanta
Northern 7
Toledo 38 Texas Arl ngton 24
Rose hit a two-&lt;~ut bases
Day on 39 Marshall 0
loaded
smgle m the SIXth uuung
Xaver 19 Cmcmnaf1 7
Sunday
and added an RBI sm
Wes tern Ill nos 30 Akr on 2.4
Norlh Dakota Stale 16
gle m a four .run outburst m the
Youngstown State 10 seventh
The ( Pa) 13 Case Western
Rose now has scored 103
Reserve 9
Wayne Stale IM ch l 17 Central runs tops m the rna )Or leagues
Slale 7
th1s season H1s 191 hits also
W lm ngton 10 Taylor I lnd ) 9 are the most of e1ther league
Ba dw n Walla ce 45 Muskmgum
Dave ConcepciOn hit a tw()17
Mar etta 13 Cap tal 7
run smgle also in the seventh
Oh 1o Wesleyan 28 DePauw and Hale McRae slammed his
lind I 6
fifth homer of the year w1th a
He del berg 69 Otter ben 13
Bluftlon 9 Adr an (M ch I 7
runner aboard m the e1ghth In
Alma IMch ) 13 Del ance 7
ning
F nd lay at Manchesler ( lnd l
Joe Hague play1ng for f1rst
ppd wei f1e!d
baseman Tony Perez hit a
double and three smgles and
Saturdays
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
drove m one run Ted Uhlaen
Footba II Scores
der
doubled borne another run
Un1ted Press International
m
the
second
Canton McK nley 57 C n Tall 0
St Th omas Aqumas 14 Canton
Houston scored an unearned
Lehma n 0
run off starter Jack Billingham
Canton Cen Cathol c 22 Canton
m the third
Sm th 7
Pedro Borbon took over alter
lnd an Valley South 20 Malvern
13
the fifth mmng and gave up two
Warren Western Reserve 14
hits and one run before taken
Barberton 0
N les 37 Cleve John Adams 12 out m the mnth for a pmch
Akron
Buchtel
6
Akron hitter B1llmgharn got the wm •
F~restone 0
his !llh against 12 defeats
Akron Ellet 28 Akron Kenmore
18
Brook I eld 27 Sharon (Pa)
Un1ted Press lnternat10na I
W•ttenberg 23 Vapara so 1.4
Bowl ng Green 16 Mtam 1 7

Youngstown North 24 Youngs
own So o
Youngstown Rayen 20 Youngs
town East 12
Lowel lv le 21 Cresfvtew 0

iiiiUronu

Alent

Security Is Lowe
I£ emergenc1e1
arise, 1s your fam·

dy adequately cov·
ercd? Secure their
well bemg w1th •
rev1sed pohcy

Consult Us Soon

Davis-Warner Ins.
11~

Kennedy 7

Beaver Local 15 Spr ngt eld
Jefferson 0

Lakewood 20 Shak er Heoghfs 12
Cleve Lutheran East 6 Beach
wood 0

Spr ngl eld 35 Mathews 0
Warren JFK 30 Cleve Holy R chmond He1ghts 12 Newbury
Name 0
6
Bedford Chane! 21 Cleve
while Denny Whitehead got Lmc ol n We st 12
Cleve Rhodes 12
another Dayton score on an II
Cleve Central Calhol c 12
yard run
Lake Catholic 12 Gilmour
Akron e1ghth ranked among Academy 12 (l1e)
Hawken School 12
the college diVISIOn learns took
Western Reser ve Academy 7
1t on the chm 30-24 from Akron St V ncent 21 Lora n
Western Illlnms m a muddy Sen or 0
battle m the Rubber Bowl
Western Ilhnms unbeaten m
The Dat~ Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
three games overcame a IM
INTEREST OF
second quarter dehc1t by
MEIGS MASON AREA
sconng 23 straight pomts
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
Exec Ed
Akron came back w1th two
ROBERT HOEFLICH
fourth quater tallies on
C1ty Ed• tor
Pub Shed
d&amp; v eJr.cept
a
50 yard
run
by Sl! urday by The
01'1 o Va ley
quarterback Enc Schoch Pub sh ng Co mpany 111
Court St
Pomeroy Oh o
and a 28-yard pass from Schoch 45769
Bus ness Off ce Ptlone
to Mac Thomas Akron IS now 992 2l56 Ed tor a! Phone 992
1157
I I I
Second c ass Qostage Plll d at
In Oh10 Conference games
Pomeroy Oh o
Net ons
adverts ng
Manetta downed Capital 13-7 represental
ve
Bott nel
Baldwm Wallace whipped Gal egher In c 12 East 42nd
Ntw York C tv New York
45 17
and St Subscr
Muskmgum
pt on rate s
De
Heidelberg routed Otterbem I vered by carr er where
lao e SO cents per wt'ek
69-13 In other games mvolvmg ava
By Motor Route where carr er
conference teams Wittenberg serv ce no t ava lab1e One
month $1 75 By ma
n Oh o
beat ValparaisO 23-14 Wooster and
W ve One year s1.- 00
blanked Alb10n 23 0 Oh10 S • months S7 25 Three
s• 50 Subscript on
Wesleyan beat DePauw 28-1l months
~r ce nc I.Jdes Sundav T mes
Oberlin lost to H1ram 46-14 Sent nel

Do Yourself

•

Everytlme you hold your pay
check m your hot httle hand, you
promise yourself to salt somethmg
away But man I S weak And what
:you want today seems a lot more
Important than wonymg abo ut
what you 11 need tomm row
QUit kiddmg yourself
Jom the Payroll Savmgs Plan
where you work Its easy Just
spec1fy an amount you want set
aside from your paycheck Then
that money IS used to buy US
Savmgs Bonds You never Sf'e the
money, so the temptatiOn to spend
1t IS removed And w1thevery pay
check your money gtows So
when you need 1t yo u 11 find
you ve got a sizeagle amount
stashed away Enough to help out
with what tomorrow may brmg
If you can t trust yourself, trust
U S Savmgs Bonds Then you'll
have a fund m your future

A Flavor!
Drive In for a delicious sundae, shake,
malt or cone. Let us fill your party
needs, too.

McCLURE'S
4th&amp; Locust

'

992-5248

Middleport' 0

Take stock in America.
Jom the PayrollSavmgsPlan

�2- Tht Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Sepl 25, 1972

IDITORIALS

Project 'Find'

WIN AT BRIDGE

'The Art of
Guessing
Right'

"Who's Responsible for the
Unauthonzed Bombings?11

In DPcember 1971 the Wh1te House Conference on
Aged fu.;ussed attention on the fact that many older
Americans suffer !rom nutr1honal deflc1enc1es because
of their llm1ted mcomes At the same t1me federal food
ass(stance programs are available m VIrtually every
l;ilUnty m the nat10n
As a result of the conference early in August a nat10n
wide campa1gn to ldenllly and enroll those older Amer
NORD!
lean~ ehg1ble for food assistance was launched
453
Four ~overnment agenc1es and the Red Cross were
106
enlisted lit the effort wh1ch mcluded the mallmg or appll
.AK8543 2
cation cards fo more than 26 m1lhon men and women
410
recewmg Soc1al Security benefits 22 5 million of whom
WEST
EAST (D)
are over the age of 60
'
.1086
.QJ72
The agencies are the U S Department of AgTiculture
.82
.KQ974
Off1ce of Economic Opportumty Social Secunty Admims
•
QJlO
!ration and ACTION. the governmenllc1tizen service
.Q7532
.A86
corps
SOUTH
Named to head the campa1gn-Pro)ect Fmd- was Dr
.AK94
Arthur S Flemmmg chairman of the White House Con
¥A 53
terence on Agmg and former secretary of Health Educa
•
76
tlon and Welfare
.KJ94
In announcmg the proJect Flemmmg said Many
None vulnerable
older persons lost to society are eligible for federal as
West
North East South
s1stance pro~rams but are not aware of 11 It 1s the role
Oble
of PrOJect Fmd to locate these people and build a bndge
Pass
3
t
Pll!s
3
NT.
between them and soc1ety
Pass Pass
Pass
F1rst returns of the project are now m
Opemng lead-• 8
Before the month was out I 355 000 cards from the
direct rnaihng had been rece1ved from people who felt
they were ehg1ble for food asSIStance (It is expected that By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
the total number of cards Will reach two mllhon )
The cards are bemg processed by computer and the
Oswald
Our old friend
names returned to Red Cross chapters across the nation
Er1c Jannersten of Sweden
So far some 270 000 names have been returned and more has wntten a book entitled
than 3 000 volunteers have been trained and are m the The Art of Guessm~ Right
f1eld to make contact w1th the people who sent tn the at the Bnd~e Table
cards As many as 50 000 volunteers will eventually be
J1m
H1s theme 1s that
enrolled
your opponents Will help yu 1
Th1s 1s a mass1ve volunteer effort says Warren guess nght if you pay allen
Dunn Project Fmd coordmator lor ACTION And 11 t1on to their bids and plavs
1s workmg as planned
Oswald The hrst hand 10
the book shows how you
should pay attentiOn to lhe1r
b1ds and the opemng lead
Twenty years from now mothers Will be a mere
Jim
A and R 10 our
spec1alty group m the Umted States says Jeanne Bm
code word ARCH which
stock a soc1olog1st at the University of Massachusetts
stands for Analy1e the lead
Th1s state of affa1rs will not result from the women s and Rev1ew the biddmg con
liberation movement but from economic factors and tech
vey the same message
nolog1caJ change she predicts m an article in appropri
Oswald
South analyzes
ately The Futumt magazme
that eight of hearts lead IS
AN EXHffiiT WITH
Modern medicme s success in reducmg mortality has the top of nothmg He plays
RODGERS AND HEART
resulted m an overproducllon of people she expla1ns
dummy s 10 and lets East
Women s hb movements are really a consequence of hold the tnck Wllh h1s queen
NEW YORK (KFS) - R1chard Rodgers
technological change They have appeared at the histon
East shifts to the s1x of was 70 last June and m this good year always a
cal moment when a shar~ reducbon In the occupahonal clubs
fine year to have DICk Rodgers around there
group known as mothers 1s mandatory
J1m
Now
IS
the
lime
to
We are forced to face the fact that 1f we do not take rev1ew the b1ddmg It IS p&lt;Js has been a senes of salutes to thiS prenuer
from women their role of mother and replace It w1th slble that East opened the popular composer whose body of musical work
something else we will be throttled by the overproduc
b1ddmg Without the ace or w1U stand forever in the hiStory of the lighter
lion of bab1es We thus face the need to demand that the
arts Broadway owes D1ck Rodgers an un
ancient and honorable occupatiOn of motherhood fall into clubs Possible but mosl 1m collectable debt and certainly Broadway today
probable East may also hold
disrepute and that women commit themselves to other
the club queen but you don I needs h1s nurustrallons as at no tune m 1ts
occupations
need a lot of club tr1cks history But Broadway has nussed the bus and
Women must be liberated to enjoy the frulls of other
What
you need 1s to play the 11 IS 5th Avenue wh1ch has caught the limousme
occujlllttons, whetl1er they want to be or not 1Emphasis
nght
club
now You hop up
hers)
w1th
the
kmg
or clubs and 11 and honors th1s remarkably unharruny man
As ~ s1dehght to th1s prediction 11 Is mterestlng to
DICk Rodgers IS not modest he knows what
holds
note that Ralph Nader whose mterests seem to have no
he
has
contributed w1thout trumpetmg 1! nor IS
Oswald
Now you a1 e
limit p.red1cts that by 1976 the nation s 200th anmver
ready for the mopping up be humble he has a delightful perspective as to
sa~I 'Women will no longer be wearmg cosmellcs We II
You can try to collect seven hiS place 10 contemporary mus1c H1s
llave ended the h1gh pnonty we put on that kind of ac
diamond tncks but you don t demeanor his Brooks Bros sh1rts neckties
Uv1ty
need them so you s1mply
Don t say you weren I warned lades And gentlemen
play a d1amond and duck m shoes choiCe of motor cars h1s gentlemanly
dummy The best the defense manners hiS sollc1tude for the feelings of artists
can do IS collect lh1s d1a failed or fabulously successful hiS gentle
rnond tnck the heart tr1ck candor h1s weil camouflaged busmess acumen
already won and two clubs his total attributes make hun umque-espec1ally
but you are sure of your cqn
among popular composers Dick Rodgers
tract
current 70th birthday salute IS a tastefully
(HEW5P4PER. EHTIRPRIS! ASS,..
totally encompassmg exhibition m his honor
By' Helen Bottel
housed m the HaUmark Gallery at 5th Ave and
56th street It 1s a one-man Hall of Fame lracmg
The
b1ddmg
has
been
a fantashc career (Including the few failures)
GffiL WHO CAME TO DINNER
West
North
East
South
from mfancy to h1s septuagenarian honors plus
Dear Helen
?
his f1m1 plans not to abandon melody~tarved
An old lriend of ours mtroduced us to his girl !r1end who
You South hold
seemed perfectly chamnng When they broke up she needed a .AK85 ¥AIOZ t K~3 4AJ6 theatregoers as he prepares several new
proJeCts There are photos of Dick growing
temporary place to stay so I took her in lor a couple of days
What do you bad
up of beautiful wife Dorothy who has known
which extended to three weeks I
A-81d one 4: I u b Wath 19
Dick
smce he was seven The1r children tbe
She finally found another roommate but she left me with a hich card points you are too
strong
to
open
one
no
trump
playbills
of early disappomtments his earliest
_,long-distance telephone bill She also borrowed $40 from me
and
whether
or
nol
you
btd
and three dresses she hasn t returned I learned today she hit my rour urd m a j o r s you should collaborations w1th U&gt;renz Hart (Dick was 17
fiance up for a Joan too In all she owes us about $150 It's been open this hand With the mmor Larry 24) startmg w1th the typically sweet
clever Any Old Place W1th You which
lour months
SUit.
Rodgers Hart zealots remember for 1ts
She has a job and doesn t pay rent or food (her new
TODA Y'S QUESTION
You do bad one club and your rornanhccrlSpness and the final Jines, I d go to
'roommate is a man) so she could alford to pay us back But
when I ask her nicely she makes me feel cheap, as II aU I think partner responds one d amond Hell For ya or Philadelphia Any old place with
What do you do now?
you That was 1919 and was not surrounded w1th
of is money The other day she said the secret ol success in ber
Answer tomorrow
a
hit production mfactRodgers &amp; Hart weren t
new affair is that they never hassle over finances It s too
to have that Hit until 1925
grubby (Her new bl thinks shes wonderful doesn't know
It s all there on the HaUmark wails and m
about her freeloading past )
glass cases the playb1Us the first manuscripts
Without leeUng grubby how do we get our money back • theatre posters water colors of stage settmgs
NEEDS IT
Has Keen Nose
costumes sketches of Dick Rodgers
The nme banded armadillo correspondence w1th famous people (the letter
Dear N I
usually
forages at mght from Edna Ferber concermng a play D1ck and
Without ACTING grubby you may never get your money
plowmg mto soft sod w1th 1ts Oscar Hammerstem produced but did not write
beck A moochers line of defense is Nice people don't nose Its keen sense of smell
The Happy Time IS a crusty corker the
discllSS dirty old money so knock off the niceness and tell this fmds Insects s1x mches be
gentle
unpudence of one from Fred Allen IS a
gal the next bill you present will be to herhoyfriend - H
low the surface and digging
With powerful front legs 1t twinge that Fred s funnybone isn t here still to
+++++
nicks out a long sticky be tickled others are poognant nostalltic
Dear Helen
tongue to capture tasty honest and none tasteless) Three small
My husband is a str11ght meat and potatoe5 man He doesn t morsels
screens offer scenes from
Rodgers
Uke change If I try different meals even another kind ol meat
rather than beef steak or roast a ngulllhed screams arise
Yet the other day he informed me that' variety is the spice of
Wile and I should read up on those sex manuals because the
same old thing gets dull
I don I consider myself dull (he doesn t either, really!)
We get along great But Helen this made me wonder How come
a man who wants the same old dinner every night m the year
Isn't happy with the same old wile d1tto&gt; - NOT AN
ACROBAT

Television Log
MONDAY SEPTEMBER 25 1n2
6 00 - News 3 ~ 8 10 Truth or Consoq 6 News13 News 15
H~thayoga 3
6 30 - NBC News 3 ~ 151 ABC News 6 CBS NeWs 8 10 Folk
Guitar 33 I Dreom ot Jeannie 13
7 00 - Elec Co 20 Nows6 Truth or Consoq 3 BeatThe Clock
4 Clrcusll3 Insight 33 What s My LineS Saint 15
7 30 - To Tell The Truth&amp; Traffic Court 10 Episode Action 33
Parent Game 3 Hollywood Squares 4 Young Dr Kildare 8
Movie

"J

.9

1 00 -

I.

Do Away with Motherhood?

I

,. Helen Help

Us.

••

DR. LAWRINCII. LAMB
The Opposite Is True

Tarzan and the Huntress

I

Focus on Columbus 4

200 - News4
2 JO- News 13
TUESDAY SEPtEMBER 26 1972
6 00 - Sunrise Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - F~rm Report 13 Farmtlme 10
6 20 - Paul H~rvey 13
6 25 - Faith For Today 13
6 30- Columbus Today 4 Bible Answers 8 Concern &amp; Com
ment 10
6 45 - Corn~ob Report 3
6 55 - Flintstones 13
7 00 - Today3 4 15 CBS News8 10 News6
7 30 - Sleepy Jeffers 8 Romper Room 6 Bullwlnkle &amp; Rocky
13
8 00 - Capt Kang~roo 10 New Zoo Revue 6 13 Sesame St 33
Timmy &amp; Lassie 6
8 JO - Jack La La nne 13 Romper Room 8 New Zoo Revue 6
9 00- Paul Dixon 4 Phil Donahue 15 Romper Room 8 Con
centratlon6 Friendly Junction 10 BenCaoey 13 Mr Rogers
33 What Every Wom~n Wants to Know 3
9 30 - ToTelltheTruth3 Jeopardy6 HazelS
10 oo- Dinah Shore 3 15 Dick Van Dyke 13 Jokers Wild 8 10
Hathayoga 33 Columbus Six Calling 6
10 30 - Concentration 3 15 Phil Donahue 4 Spilt Second 13
Price Is Rlaht 8 10
11 oo-SaleoftheCentury3 15 Love American Style6 Gambit
8 10 Password 13
11 30 - Hollywood Squares3 4 15 Love of Life 8 10 Bewitched
6 13
12 oo - Jeopardy J 15 Password 6 Bob Braun s 50 so Club 4
Jackie Oblinger 8 News 10 13
12 oo- Jeopardy 3 15 Password 6 Bob Braun s so 50 Club 4
Jackie Oblinger 8 News 10 13
12 25 - CBS News 8
12 30 - 3 WsGame3 15 SplttSecond6 Search for TomorrowS
10
1 00 - News 3 All My Children 6 13 It s Your Bel 8 Green
Acres 10 Walch Your Child 15
1 30 - 3 On A Match 3 4 1~ Lets Make A Deal 6 13 As The
World Turns 8 10
2 oo - Oays of Our L ves J 4 15 Newlywed Game 13 Mike
Douglass 6 Guiding Ll~ht S 10
2 30 - Doctors3 ~ 15 DatngGame13 EdgeotN/ght8 10
3 00 - General Hosplta/6 13 Another World 3 4 15 Love Is
Splendored Thing 8 10
3 30-0neL/IetoLlve6 ReturntoPeytonPiaceJ 4 15 Secret
Storm 8 10
4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame 51 33
Love
Amer can Style 13 Merv Gnttln 4 Fllntslones 6 Gilligan s
Island 8 Movie Desert Leg ion 10
4 25 - Sports Club 6
4 30- I Love Lucy 6 Pett coat Junction 3 Oanlel Boone 13
Merv Griffin 8 Andy Grlff1th 15
5 00 - Dick Van Dyke 15 Merv Griffin 8 Mr Rogers 33

films mcludlng TV s hlStoTlc V1ctory at Sea
adroitly composed to underscore the patr1ohsm
w1thout jmgolSIIl and the whole exhibition
takes 1t proper title from one of his own songs
which for the purpose of the exhibition IS most
appropnate because he wrote both words and
music The Sweetest Sounds We got to the
exhibition two hours early on purpose or
course durmg 1ts official hours it was jammed
With friends and the press TV cameras and
uncounted strangers who remember better to a
Rodgers song whose hearts and sp1rita had
Tarzan 13 Ponderosa 3 4 Daniel Boone 6
been lifted at hearmg h1s compos1tions One
5
30Marshall Dillon 15 Elec Co 33 Dragnet 8 Gomer Pyle
hundred of his most famous hit songs are played
13
constantly on a hidden sound system Joe 6 00 - News 3 4 8 10 15
Bousard was and will be at the plano between 6 30 - News 3 4 15 6 8 10 I Dream of Jeannie 13 Growing
Up 33
the Gallery s twin staircases Monday through 7 ooHim
- News6 10 What s My Llne8 Elec Co 20 Andy Grltt/lh
Friday between 12 30 and 2 30 p rn to g1ve !be
15 Beat The Clock 4 I ve Got A Secret 13 Truth or Con
sequences 3 Saint 15
long lived Rodgers standards a live per
Masterpiece Theatre 33 This Is Your Lie 3 OoctMs On
forrnance he s good and plainly loves the 7 30Call 4 To Tell The Truth 6 Pnce Is R•ght 8 10 Seal The
Rodgers songs
Clock IJ
8
00
- Bonanza 3 4 15 Temperatures R s ng 6 13 Maude 8 10
D1ck s f1rst song Dear Old Wigwam
8 30 - Hawaii F ve 0 8 10 Movie Moon ot The Wolf 6 13
isn t herein reproduced from his cache of more
Video Variations 33
than 1 000 melodies and hundreds of hits He 9 00 - Bald Ones 3 4 15
9 30 - Movie Deadly Harvest 8 10 Marsh~ II U Sports 33
wrote 11 at 14 - at c9JOP
10 oo - NBC Reports3 4 15 Morcuo Welby MD 6 13 Firing
Line 33
The Hailrnark exh1b1tion IS convenient for 11 00 - News Weather Sports3 4 6 8 10 13 15
11 JO - Dick Cavett 6 Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Vlrg nlan 8 Movie
browsmg and we browsed all alone to our
They Mode Me ACnmlnal 10 Movie River of No Relurn
memory s content
13
1 00 - Your Health 4
There are countless lists of fine
I 30 - Nows Weather 4 Local News 13
songwT~ters and they are a heady hammy,
happy breed Dick Rodgers breaks the mold !If
most of the rest You could get Mack Gordon,
who wrote scores of hila to sing his entire
repertoire m the nuddle of Bdwy at high noon
Even Irvmg BerUn would sing a hit or a new
ditty at a hint and as someone said about lr
ving s srnaiJ vmce You gotta hug him to hear
BY PAUL CRABTREE
him J Fred Coots will sing his Santa Clauals
Psssing reviews and conunents on other new shows of the
Commg To Town in July for you or 'Two
new
TV season
Tickets to Georgia in Harlem Sammy Cahn
M A.S.H 8 p.rn , CBS
wl11 do an hour of his latest songs and toss in a
It would be unposslble for a weekly ser1es to generate the
parody about yourself for no recompense except
his exhibitionism George Gershwm at any pungency IITeverence and comedy which made this Korean
party elbowed the hired pianist from his bench War medical story a smash movie hit
I waan t around during the American Revolution nor the War
and played brilliantly his own songs An
of
1812,
but I have a feeling that there s always been a bit of dark
even~ With Gershwin IS a GershWill evening,
Oscar Levant said and Oscar, after he played a hnrnor surrounding American men at war - men !rom a supmedley of his hits would play a Gershwin posedly egalitarian SOCiety thrown Into the rigid caste system of
evemng while George romanced a new g1rl the milltary There have been dozens of comedies based on the
Frank Loesser played his songs at parties in the theme from World War II alone ranging from Phil Silvers
Gershwm if not so gifted manner betimes audacious Sgt BUko to McHale s Navy to Hogan s Heroes ek
finding out how he might manage to take over ek
So what makes M-A.S.H so different•
the show s souvenir book concession or
No
much II the season premiere is any Indication
somehow mvade any casbsble aspect of his
ln fact McHale s Navy did essentially the same thing -and
theatricals\ Harold Arlen sang his own songs
did
II
better a decade ago
without ha11lliWless But never in our hearing or
Oh it had some good Unes, as the lower echelon persoMei
research did or does D1ck Rodgers Probably
at the Korean base hospital plotted against their superiors to
because every else does
throw a big raffie and party all for a good cause (helping their
Koren houseboy to attend college)
And there was some respectable acting but the cast, frank
ly, Is too big at the moment Identification with characters was
difficult becau'le the producers evidently asswned everyone
tuned In haueen the movie, and could take It from there
Somehow, I just can I get very much In a funoftlld-games
mood about a show based on the fun and games of those sent
over!lells to minister to young Americans (and the youth of other
nations) who are wounded and maimed in combat Sorry but M
A.S H is no 8-M A.S.H where I m concerned
Maude 8 p m Tuesdays CBS
Maude Edith Bunker s cousin is a spin-off from the
tmued boiling will not ehm1 heart and increases the rest
nate the caffeme Therefore ing heart rate as do all trernendously.fumy All in the Family starring the In
the actual coffee that you nerve stimulants It has the stltuttonalhed American Archie Bunker
descnbed contams calfeme opposite effect of tranqulllz
Archie Is outspoken belligerent has a beautiful daughter a
and 1f It has been boiling for ers In susceptible people it spouse he seems to dominate - and Is a hardhat lower-middle
hours Without added water can cause irregularities of
to d1lute 1t, 1t can contain a the heart Caffeine causes class c1111.1ervatlve
Maude is outspoken belligerent has a beautiful daughter, a
the stomach to Increase the
great deal of caffeine
amount
of
acid
pepsin
juice
apouae
she seems to dominate - and Is a hardheaded, upperThe habit U1 Mexico of
drinking coffee with milk it produces and may cause middle class liberal
(cafe au la1t) as you de indigestion ' burning ol the
Give me Archie, any time Msude may play in my political
scribed 1t of course dilutes stomach' and it can Irritate pasture -but that sjustaboul her only redeeming quallty
the coffee a great deal It the bowel particularly In in
The fantastic success ol Archie Bunker lies in the fact that
decreases the caffeme con divlduals who are susceptl
ble
to
Irritable
colon
or
ner
he's a genuine human being -wrong-headed, under-educated
tent m a smgle cup to about
one third the amount ob- vous colon Individuals who and often bigoted But, being genuine, he evokes in us a 11)'111·
tained m a normal brew as have trouble utilizing ordln pathetic chord We enn feel a little sorry for him when he justly
surning that you used one ary coffee usually tolerate geta his COille-uppance for some or his lar.out rlghtlit Ideas
third brewed coffee and two the decaffeinated products
Alter aU, the guy worka hard for a living, does the beat he can lor
thirds boiling m1lk The cal very well
thoee he loves, and came by his prejudice&amp; and hatreds naturally
IHIWIPAPIO IHTIRPRIII AIIH)
floles WhiCh impart the na
vor to coffee are usually
and h111eatly He's Wl1111g, but he'a real
h a r m I e s s Decaffeinated
Maude Is pre tenUous She 'I)Outa the buzz-wcrdl and phra*
commemal coffee products
Send your quntlooJ to Or Lomb or enlightened Uberallam glibly, and she's not credible when she
then contam calliole and In coro of thlt _,pq,.r , 0 ,.,
tannin and usually have no 1$51 ~odoo C•tr Stllfoon Now Yorl does 110 -just a little obnolious Msude alao gets the edge on
slgmf1rant effect on the N Y 10019 Foro co, of Dr Lomb 1 Archie becauae she lsn 't poor or poorijo«&lt;ucaled - she just
body unlike c alfelne
boollot "' boloMti ~lot JMI4 50 halll't bothered to have an oripllllllaqht In twenty yell'll
Caffeme stimulates the ctnh to tltt ••• ftlrtu tlltd ••k Whatever II' In" with the Ill!• It, •ptblra, geta a knee-jerk
nervous system and the f101 "lolon&lt;H Dltf belllltt
poaltlve reactlon from

&amp; THINGS

Boiling Won't Nix Caffeine

Dear Not
Maybe your husbarxl could counter will' this quesbon (in the
llpir1t ol good clean banter naturally) How come a wile who
loves to cook ''different rearranges furniture at the drop ol a
aof&amp; arxl probably nags her man into buymg new sulta just when
lhe old ones are getting comfortable leaves her change-ability
at the bedroom door• - H

By Lawrence Lamb, MD
Dear Dr Lamb - Our par
ents lived In the southern
part of Mexico the Yucatan
state Early In the morning
they prepared a big pot of
coffee-just
plain ground col
Dear Helen
They never knew about
Please no hedging Are you for N 0 W or H 0 W( The finrt, fee
instant coffee and that pot
of course ls the women s llberat1on organlzaUon The second is full of coffee was kept near
an(i.llb Happiness of Womanhood 'It emphasizes that women the fire for many long hours
11re happiest doing female things and they should leave the Msn s
They used to invite every
one commg to the house to
World to the men
have a cup of coffee The
What s your stand • - WANTS TO KNOW
coffee was always slowly
bolling Our people never
DearWfK
complained about the caf
I'm a NOW type (but not a member) who beUevea the lelne In coffee
''lfapp~ of Women" is the freedom to choose whatever Ule
You may have noticed that
!bey~,beltpure homemaking, totaldedlcatlon tocan!el', or In the packer s directions for
preparing coffee they say
a \Yidable mlxqu-e
boil the coffee We
never
lliil4puih for equal pay,equalrecognition to PERSONS (not
presume
the reason has
menly femala), the Natl01111l OrganlzatlOII for Women makes
aornethlng to do with the fla
,reucNble demands The rights It aaka will help th01e who need vor What we would hke
them, and lheywon tharmthoaewhofeeltheydon t
to know Is by balling the
Ub«atlon &amp;imply mea111 Women no longer need to be coffee lor a long time be
lore drinking It say 15 min
!141~;,ecl What 1110 frightening about that• H
utea or more can this ellrnt
P.S II! qther W'OI'dl, 'Un and let lib!'

nate the ev1i effects of cal
feme and make the coffee
harmless' We must say by
the way that we seldom
drmk black coffee It IS usu
ally half or one third coffee
and the rest boUing milk
We don t think much of
caffeine free coffee and
would rather have our own
method to make 1t free our
selves 1f that 1s possible
Dear Reader - There are
three main mgred1ents In
coffee The caffeine wh1ch IS
a drug and belongs to the
same group of drugs as am
phetamme&amp; commonly called
speed calf1oles respons1
ble for the flavor and tannin
which Imparts a b1tter taste
to coffee The caffeme and
caffioles go Into solution
just below the boiling point
and the tannm enters solu
tion at the bOiling pomt or
above You re correct then
m assurnmg that the direc
lions not to boll the coffee
is to protect 1ts flavor Con

13

8 OO - Gunsmoke8 10 Rowa and Martins Laugh In 3 4 UFO
6 Baoeball 15 Mind ot Man 33
9 00 - Heres Lucy 8 10 Movie See No Evil 3 15 Pro
Football 6 13 Movie Dead Run 4
9 30 - Doris Day 8 10
10 00 - Bill Cosby 8 10 State otthe University Address 33
10 30- Human Dimensions JJ
11 00 - News3 4 6 News 8 10 IS
11 30 - Dick Cavett&amp; Johnny Carson 3 • 15 Movie 8 Movie
Beauty and the Robot 10
12 00 - News 6
12 30 - Movie R~whlde 13

111•

3- T~P~ily Sentinel, Middleport Pcmeroy, o.cSept 25,1972
·~

.

the Sports

Namath Has Big Day Bengals On
Top, 15-10

By JOE CARNICEW
UP! Sports Write•
By Chet Tannehill
Joe Namath d1do t guarantee
11 this time but he did g1ve a b1g
hint
Three years ago m January
· 1969 Namath guaranteed
A couple of boys one obviously m high school the other the New York Jets would beat
probably juruor high were walkmg down the hill Friday mght the Baltimore Colts m the
toward U&gt;gan s commercial center after the Marauders' 13-8 Super Bowl and he went out
VICtory over the Ch1eftams
and led h1s club to an upset
There were other U&gt;gan mourners of what recently had VICtory
transpired massed and moVIng along the sidewalk The con
Butthatwasthelasttunethe
versat10n SUitably was muted alter all how gleeful can you be Jets defeated the Colts until
alter your team 1s tbe VICtim of a 60-yard bomb thrown and Namath changed 11 all Sunday
caught for a wmmng touchdown w1th just 1 27lert m the game•
Durmg the week he was
AMarauder fan was close enough m the group to overbear asked II he would go to a short
the older boy say to the younger My dad told me tbat Pomeroy passmg game aga1nst Balli
coach would beat the hell out of us
more s zone defense the best
Such IS the reputation of Charles Chancey one-lime Pomeroy
m the National Football
High School head football coach and after a stmt at the college League No not necessarily
level (Marshall U assiStant) coach of the Marauders since 1967
be rephed There are times
Coach Chancey IS the first to admit his team maybe dido t you can go long agamst a
beat the H- out of U&gt;gan, but his squad won the game and zone Then he broke into a big
earned 11 the hard way That IS by sticking w1th the defense and gr~e showed wbat was so
offense they had been coached to use even though down 8-7 and funny Sunday as he bombed
the clock all but ran out
away lor SIX touchdowns and
'These k1ds have somethmg special mused Chancey 496 yards enroute to a 44-34
thoughtfnlly after the game over the traditional cheeseburger
triumph over the Colts
fmsandseveralcoffeesatCrows (w1thMaryathlss1de)
Elsewhere m the NFL
They don t qu1t They keep commg at you They re used to Sunday Mmnesota drubbed
wlnnmg they JUSt won t admit they cant wm
Detrmt 34-10 M1am1 npped
That s your 1972 Marauders mostly a green mexper1enced Houston 34 13 Washmgton
squad of a few semors numerous )Umors and several stopped St U&gt;ulS 24-10 Dallas
blue nbbon sophomores certam to be heard from more
held off the New York Giants
m the future
Nobody not even Kenny Braun (Mulberry Ave ) IS pred1c
ling a champ10nsh1p thiS year But I agree w1th Kenny and Coach
Chancey that (I) the Marauders aren tout of It yet and (2)
Nat1onal Football league
they II have something to say about who IS champion

Desk

'

23 14 Cmcmnatt edged P1lls
burgh 15 10 San D1ego
npped Denver 37 14 Oakland
edged Green Bay 20-14 New
England upset Atlanta 21 20
Ch1cago tied Los Angeles t:l13 Buffalo stunned San
Francisco
27 20
and
Cleveland whipped Ph1la
delphia 27 17 Kansa s C1ly 1s
at New Orleans tomght
Sub Dave Osborn scored
three touchdowns as the
Vlkmgs downed Detro1t for the
runth consecutive time Osborn
had TD runs of one and 14
yards and caught a 13-yard
sconng pass from Fran
Tarkenton Tarkenton also
passed 40 yards to John
G1ll1am for another score
Jun Ki1ck scored a pa1r of
TDs and Larry Csonka Mereu
ry MorriS and Bob Gnese had
one each as the Dolphins
remamed unbeaten by r1ppmg
Houston Dan Pastonm threw
82 yards to Charhe Jo1ner for
an Oiler TD
Larry Brown set a club
career rushmg record and
Washmgton s defense scored
one TD and set up another as
the Redskins beat St Lows
Tom Fr1tsch s three field
goals one a 54-yarder helped

l)nUas beat the Giants desp1te
long TD passes of 94 and 55
yards from Norm Snead to
R1ch Houston
Horst Muhlmann kicked !1ve
field goals to account lor all the
Cmcmnatl sconng as the
Bengals downed the Steelers
John Hadi threw two TD
passes and Mike Garrett ran 41
yards lor another score to lead
San D1ego over the Broncos
Jack Tatum s record 104yard return of a recovered
fumble sparked Oakland past
Green Bay
Carl Garrett ran 12 yards lor
the gG&lt;~head score nudway
through the last period and the
Falcons Bill Bell blew an easy
m-yard field goat attempt w1th
28 seconds left as the Patrwts
mpped Ailanta
Mac PerciVal s 45-yard field
goal m the last penod earned
Ch1cago a lie w1th the Rams

Jun Braxton scored tw1ce 1n
the fourth period as Buffalo
upset the Forty Nmers
Mike Phipps ran for one
score and threw 23 yards to
Frank Pitts for another to lead
Cleveland over Philadelphia

Weekend Football Scores, Standings
Standmgs

THE 15-YARD PENALTY ASSESSED agamst Me1gs w1th
less than a mmute to go m the game g1vmg U&gt;gan a l1rst down on
about the Me1gs 30 could have been disastrous Fortunately 11
wasn t Fans who saw Coach Chancey riSk a penalty by gomg
onto the field to argue the penalty knew somethmg had to be very
wrong It was Let me explam
The Situation was thiS
U&gt;gan had a screen pass set up quarterback Kemper mtendmg to hit 210 lb fullback Ken CUlbertson behmd the !me of
scrlnunage near the nuddie surrounded by a screen of blockers
The rule book - as Coach Chancey demonstrated to the offiCials
after the game - exphc1tly states that in such a formation the
defense IS pernulted to tackle any offensive back behind the line
of scnrnmage whether or not he has the ball Aod offensive
linemen are permitted to block downf1eld (not as pass rece1vers
but as for a ground play from scrunrnage) This rule bas been m
effect since 1969
The Marauders Alan McGioughlm bne backer had been
mstructed to tackle Culbertson behmd the Une when he saw the
screen setting up That IS exactly what Mr McGloughlm d1d so
elfechvely the ball moments later beirg thrown to the b1g
fullback but harmlessly because Alan had a good hold on him
But wa1t Down came the red flag Holdmg sa1d the
referee the other officials concurrmg
Their decillion was maintained at the time and Chancey
already having InVIted another 15-yd penalty lor gomg onto the
field retreated praymg and determmed to clarify the ruUng
alter the game because as he sa1d, I ve been teaching my boys
to defend against the screen that way and 1! I m wrong I want to
know 11
At the time of the ongmal ca 11 and later m the post mortem
after tbe game the off1c1als l1rst argued the mfraction was for
holding When the rule was cited they S81d CUlbertson was
beyond the line of scrliJUnage (thus theoretically) making the
call legal as if the play were a standard 'forward pass The
fact was the olflclllls did not know whether or not Culbertson was
beyond the line They did not nag the spot of infraction then
check to see exactly its location
Chancey s perfectly log1cal pomt was that if Culbertson were
behind the line the tackle (or holding) was legal And that 1!
Culbertson were beyond the line of scrliJUnage U&gt;gan had to be
penalized lor having illegal receivers downf1eld (the Unemen
blocking downfleld) thus olfsettmg penalties and loss of down 1
When all this was thrashed out after the game three of the
four officials agreed fully w1th Chancey and the fourth - to be
left urudenlifled - agreed that Maybe I made a m1stake
And that fnends IS one or the fme pomts of this highly
technica I art of coaching football

Umted Press International
Nat1ona I Conference

Eastern

DIVISIOn

W L T PF PA
2 o 0 51 20

Dallas
Wash r g ton

2 0 0 48 31
I 0 20 27

St Louos

1

New York G1ants

0 2 0 30 53
0 2 o 23 55

Ph lade/ph a

Central Drvts1on
W L T

M nnesota

PF PA

OHIO COLLEGE
FOOTBALL RECORDS
Un1led Press International
M1d Amencan Conference
Conference All Games

KentSiate
Toledo
Western M ch

Mam
Oh o Un v

1 I 0 55 34

Green Bay
Delro I
Ch cago

Western

1 I 0 40 30
1 1 0 40 50
0 1 1 34 50
DIVISIOn

W L T

PF PA

2 I 0
1 I 0

0 1 0

1 2 0

Oh1o Conference
Conference All Games

WLT WLT
2 0 0

Los Angeles

1 0

1 I 0 54 30
de berg
2 0 0
1 I 0 57 42 He
8aldw n Wallace

New Orleans

0

I

0

14

Amenca n Con terence
Eastern DIVISIOn

PF
0 0 54
0 0 85
I 0 51
1 0 28

W L T

Mam
New York Jets
Buflalo
New Eng and

2
2
1
1

Balt more
0 2 0 37
Central D•vrslon

27

0 0 0
0
0

SanFran

AI an Ia

1 47

WLT WLT
100 200
1 0 0 I 1 1
0 0 0 2 1 0

Bowl ng Green

34

PA
23
58
61 Oberl n
51 Wltenberg
54

W L T PF PA

C nc nnatr

I 0
0
0
0

Kenyon
I
Ma 1etta
1
Den son
0
Mount Un on

0 0 0
0 0 0
0 0
0 0
0 I
0 I

2
1
2
2

0
0
0
0

0
1
0
0

I I I
0 2 0

0 1 1 0
0 1 0 0
0 0 2 0
0 0 2 0

17 Cap tal
I 1 0 44 43 Oh1o
Wesleyan
C eve and
I 1 0 37 43
0 1 0 1 1 0
Houston
0 2 0 30 64 Otterbem
0
2 0 0 2 0
Western DIVISIOR
W L T PF PA
Oak and
I I 0 48 48
San 0 ego
1 1 0 40 48
Others
Denver
1 1 0 44 54
w L T
Kans C ly
0 1 0 10 20 Ashland
3 0 0
Sunday s Results
Bluffton
2 0 0
New England 21 Allanla 2U
W lm ngton
1 0 0
Cleveland 27 Ph ladeIph a 17
1 0 0
Oh o State
Oal as 23 New York Gants 14 x F nd ay
1 0 0
San Diego 37 Denver 1.4
H ram
1 0 0
M amr 34 Houston 13
Dayt on
2 I 0
Los Angeles 13 Ch cago 13
Xaver
2 I 0
Mmnesota 34 Detro t 10
Akron
1 1
New York Jet s 4A Balf1more 34 Def1an ce
1 1 0
Oakland 20 Green Bay 14
John Carrol
1 1 0
C nc nnah 1S P1tfsburgh 10
Oh10 Northern
1 1 0
Wa shmglon 24 St Lou s 10
1 2 0
C ncmnat
Buffalo 27 San Franc1sco 20
Central State
0 I 0
Mondays Games
Case Western
0 2 0
Kansas C ty at New Orleans Voungslown State
0 2 0
In ghll
x - Does not nclude Monday
(Only game scheduled)
game

P llsburgh

2 0 0 46

Wooster
Musk ngum

0
0
0
0

Falcons In Driver's
Seat After Big Win

Browns Claim
First Victory
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) Nick Skorich remembers
disastrous afternoons m
Philadelphia
He had enough of them as
head cosch of an Eagles team
that plummeted from the
championship of the National
Football League m 1960 to last
place in 1962 and 1963
Skorich returned to Philadel
phia Sunday as head cosch of
the Cleveland Browns but
disaster didn t come back to
haunt him The Browns pickup
up the1r first triUmph of the
season with a 27 17vlctory over
the Eagles
Cleveland actually accorn
pUshed the destruction durmg
a 57«CD~~d span late in the
second quarter, when they
jumped from a fl.J edge into a
2lJ..3 halftime bulge by converting two turnovers Into touchdowns OveraU the Eagles
overshadowed the Browns 20 to
15 in finrt downs and 314 to '1m
in total yardage
~arterback Mike Plupps
ran off left end in the third
quarter for a 27-3 lead enough
to hold off a late Eagles surge
Skorlch said hla Browns went
~ in eiblbltions and lOBI the
seaaon's opener to Green Bay
because they surrendered too
many turnovers, arxl defeated
the Eagles because ''football Is
a prne of give and take '
Brown Uneblcker Jolm
unpn 1oo11 It any from the

Liske pass m the end zone on
the Eagles l1rst dnve The
Eagles gave 1t away nudway
through the second quarter
when Liske threw a screen
pass mto the hands of defensive
end Bob Br1ggs ins1de the
Philadelphia ~yard line Two
plays later Bo Scott plunged
from lbe one to make it 13-3
The Eagles also gave It away
on the ensuing kickoff when
rookie Pat G1bbs fumbled on a
runback that left him with torn
knee legarnents one of 10
Philadelphia mjuries wh1ch
mcluded AI Nelson s broken
nose Phipps hit wide rece1ver
Frank Pitts on a 23-yard third
down pass for the TD
Briggs said his mterceptlon
was the twmng pomt of the
game
'I wasn t there by accident
he said "From reviewing
game films we knew that when
the Eagles tackle cut his
blocking short It would be a
screen, and I got in position for
It
Eagles Coach Ed Khayat
sold Liske s arm began
bothering him during the first
half so rookie John Reaves
carne on in the third quarter
The N0 I draft chOICe
promptly rallied the Eaw1th
a
20 yard
gles
TD
pass
to
ltarold
Jackson and scored on a oneyard sneak Jackson, who
entered the game as the
Elllel by --~·· ...... leape'1 leading receiver,

o.r.

By GENE CADOES
UP! Sports Writer
Coach Don Nehlen of
Bow llng Green IS homes1ck
The Falcons picked up the1r
second straight wm on the road
Saturday a 16-7 devis1on over
M1am1 m an early show-down
game m the M1d AmeriCan
Conference but face two more
away games before meehng
Kent State at home Oct 14
Saturday s v1ctory coming
on the heels of a 17 14 upset of
Purdue the week before put
Bowling Green m the dnver s
seat m the MAC IItle chase but
Nehlen sa1d I don t even want
to thmk about the rest of our
schedule
wh1ch mcludes
bes1des four conference
games Tampa and San D1ego
State
In Saturday s other Mid Am
game Kent State led by fresh
man quarterback Greg Kokal
scored 28 pomls m the second
half to bury Ohio University 37
14
The Flashes now I 1 1 on the
sdded seven catches for 131
yards
The Eagles held on the ensuing series and Bill Bradley
returned the punt to the
Browns 20 In position for a
touchdown that would have
puiled the Eagles to within 27
24 But Reaves was racked for
an etght-yard loBS, and reliable
Tom Dempsey was wide on a
short field goal try for the
second time in the game
' I never missed two Uke that
before Dempsey said I
have an idea what went wrong
bit 1 Will t say whst I'll have
to look at the game films to be
11\n I'

year an d 1-0m the MAC scored
two touchdowns w1thm 15
seconds m the th1rd quarter to
overcome a 14-9 deficit and
then added two more m the
fourth to make 1t a rout
Kokal a 6-1 170-pounder
from Euchd who IS only 17
years old threw two touch
down passes one of 17 yards to
Jeff Murray and the other 47
yards to Eddie Woodard and
set up another w1th a 60-yard
run
At Toledo Joe Schwartz
returned from quarterback to
his old tailback spot ran for 188
yards and three touchdowns to
lead the Rockets to a 311-24 wm
over Texas-Arlington
Schwarz who started the
first two games at quar
terback camed a record 39
limes and scored on runs of 2S
I and 2 yards It was the
Rockets second v1ctory
agamst one loss th1s year and
their 37th wm 1n their last 38
games
Xav1er taking advantage of
Cmcmnati rn1scues picked up
Its first wm m f1ve years over
the cross town nval Bearcats
With a 19-7 deciSIOn
Unebacker Bob Ries in
tercepted a pass and recovered
a fwnble both of which were
turned mto scores by the un
derdog Musketeers
Dayton w1th a record four
f1eld goals by freshman Greg
Schwarber leadmg the way
rolled to a 39-0 v1ctory over
Marshall Schwarber kicked
f1eld goals of 2S, 22, 41&amp;nd 40
yards and miSSed tries from 23
35 and '1:1 yards away
Tailback Walt Wingard
scored twice on runs of nine
and two yards lor the Flyers,

Saturdays
Oh10 College
Football Results

Game Cancelled
The M1egs Logan reserve
game scheduled Saturday
mght at Marauder Stadium
\las cancelled due to a miX
up 10 time schedulmg
Logan came tu Pomeroy

early m the alternoon
thmkmg the game was
scheduled for alternoon
Logan refused to wa1t or to
make another tnp to
Pomeroy Game lime had
been set at 8 p ru
The Gall1pohs Jackson
reserve game which began
at 7 30 p m •us called
midway m the hrst quarter
because of a heavy elec

trical storm With the score
0-0

Rose After

200 Hits;
Reds Win
HOUSTON (UP!) -Now that
the heat IS oil the Cincmnati
Reds Pete Rose can concen
Irate on gettmg 200 h1ts this

We played better m our first
exhibitiOn game than we
played today Bradshaw who
scored the Slee lers lone touchdown on a 12-yard run, corn
mented We were JUS! louay
Noil and Bradshaw also were
m agreement that a fourthquarter pass to flanker RoiUlle
Shanklm 1n the end zone should
have been a touchdown The
offiCial ruled that Sbanklin was
out of bounds
Never Complained
I d1dn t thmk there was any
questiOn about It bemg a touchdown
Bradshaw srud
I
couldn t beheve 11 when they
ruled hun out of bounds
Linebacker Bill Bergey who
calls the Bengais defensive
s1gnals sa1d the defense
never complamed when
repeatedly called up&lt;Jn to hold
the Steelers after the offense
gave the ball up through
fumbles and mterceptions
Last year that sort of thmg
would get us down and we
never seemed to be able to
come back he sa1d Now we
JUSt go out and do the job

season

Rose h1t h1s !90th and 191st
Sunday as the Reds thrashed
the Houston Astros 10-2
Kent Slate 37 Oh10 U 14
The wm wrapped up two of
Den1son 37 Jun ala ( Pa ) 7
the three games of the week
Kenyon 13 Wash ng ton &amp; Jef
end
The f1rst cornmg Friday
ferson 13 (t e)
mght clmched the Nat1onal
Ash and 51 Edmboro ( Pa ) 7
Mount Un on 25 Grove C1ty League West title for the Reds
IPa I 0
The Reds followed that Wllh
H ram 46 Obert n 1.4
a
7 I loss on Saturday They
Allegheny IPa) 17 John Carroll
7
were Idle today and return
Wooster 23 Alb on IM ch ) 0
HI sda le (Moch ) 26 Oh10 home Tuesday mght lor the
start of a senes w1th Atlanta
Northern 7
Toledo 38 Texas Arl ngton 24
Rose hit a two-&lt;~ut bases
Day on 39 Marshall 0
loaded
smgle m the SIXth uuung
Xaver 19 Cmcmnaf1 7
Sunday
and added an RBI sm
Wes tern Ill nos 30 Akr on 2.4
Norlh Dakota Stale 16
gle m a four .run outburst m the
Youngstown State 10 seventh
The ( Pa) 13 Case Western
Rose now has scored 103
Reserve 9
Wayne Stale IM ch l 17 Central runs tops m the rna )Or leagues
Slale 7
th1s season H1s 191 hits also
W lm ngton 10 Taylor I lnd ) 9 are the most of e1ther league
Ba dw n Walla ce 45 Muskmgum
Dave ConcepciOn hit a tw()17
Mar etta 13 Cap tal 7
run smgle also in the seventh
Oh 1o Wesleyan 28 DePauw and Hale McRae slammed his
lind I 6
fifth homer of the year w1th a
He del berg 69 Otter ben 13
Bluftlon 9 Adr an (M ch I 7
runner aboard m the e1ghth In
Alma IMch ) 13 Del ance 7
ning
F nd lay at Manchesler ( lnd l
Joe Hague play1ng for f1rst
ppd wei f1e!d
baseman Tony Perez hit a
double and three smgles and
Saturdays
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
drove m one run Ted Uhlaen
Footba II Scores
der
doubled borne another run
Un1ted Press International
m
the
second
Canton McK nley 57 C n Tall 0
St Th omas Aqumas 14 Canton
Houston scored an unearned
Lehma n 0
run off starter Jack Billingham
Canton Cen Cathol c 22 Canton
m the third
Sm th 7
Pedro Borbon took over alter
lnd an Valley South 20 Malvern
13
the fifth mmng and gave up two
Warren Western Reserve 14
hits and one run before taken
Barberton 0
N les 37 Cleve John Adams 12 out m the mnth for a pmch
Akron
Buchtel
6
Akron hitter B1llmgharn got the wm •
F~restone 0
his !llh against 12 defeats
Akron Ellet 28 Akron Kenmore
18
Brook I eld 27 Sharon (Pa)
Un1ted Press lnternat10na I
W•ttenberg 23 Vapara so 1.4
Bowl ng Green 16 Mtam 1 7

Youngstown North 24 Youngs
own So o
Youngstown Rayen 20 Youngs
town East 12
Lowel lv le 21 Cresfvtew 0

iiiiUronu

Alent

Security Is Lowe
I£ emergenc1e1
arise, 1s your fam·

dy adequately cov·
ercd? Secure their
well bemg w1th •
rev1sed pohcy

Consult Us Soon

Davis-Warner Ins.
11~

Kennedy 7

Beaver Local 15 Spr ngt eld
Jefferson 0

Lakewood 20 Shak er Heoghfs 12
Cleve Lutheran East 6 Beach
wood 0

Spr ngl eld 35 Mathews 0
Warren JFK 30 Cleve Holy R chmond He1ghts 12 Newbury
Name 0
6
Bedford Chane! 21 Cleve
while Denny Whitehead got Lmc ol n We st 12
Cleve Rhodes 12
another Dayton score on an II
Cleve Central Calhol c 12
yard run
Lake Catholic 12 Gilmour
Akron e1ghth ranked among Academy 12 (l1e)
Hawken School 12
the college diVISIOn learns took
Western Reser ve Academy 7
1t on the chm 30-24 from Akron St V ncent 21 Lora n
Western Illlnms m a muddy Sen or 0
battle m the Rubber Bowl
Western Ilhnms unbeaten m
The Dat~ Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
three games overcame a IM
INTEREST OF
second quarter dehc1t by
MEIGS MASON AREA
sconng 23 straight pomts
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
Exec Ed
Akron came back w1th two
ROBERT HOEFLICH
fourth quater tallies on
C1ty Ed• tor
Pub Shed
d&amp; v eJr.cept
a
50 yard
run
by Sl! urday by The
01'1 o Va ley
quarterback Enc Schoch Pub sh ng Co mpany 111
Court St
Pomeroy Oh o
and a 28-yard pass from Schoch 45769
Bus ness Off ce Ptlone
to Mac Thomas Akron IS now 992 2l56 Ed tor a! Phone 992
1157
I I I
Second c ass Qostage Plll d at
In Oh10 Conference games
Pomeroy Oh o
Net ons
adverts ng
Manetta downed Capital 13-7 represental
ve
Bott nel
Baldwm Wallace whipped Gal egher In c 12 East 42nd
Ntw York C tv New York
45 17
and St Subscr
Muskmgum
pt on rate s
De
Heidelberg routed Otterbem I vered by carr er where
lao e SO cents per wt'ek
69-13 In other games mvolvmg ava
By Motor Route where carr er
conference teams Wittenberg serv ce no t ava lab1e One
month $1 75 By ma
n Oh o
beat ValparaisO 23-14 Wooster and
W ve One year s1.- 00
blanked Alb10n 23 0 Oh10 S • months S7 25 Three
s• 50 Subscript on
Wesleyan beat DePauw 28-1l months
~r ce nc I.Jdes Sundav T mes
Oberlin lost to H1ram 46-14 Sent nel

Do Yourself

•

Everytlme you hold your pay
check m your hot httle hand, you
promise yourself to salt somethmg
away But man I S weak And what
:you want today seems a lot more
Important than wonymg abo ut
what you 11 need tomm row
QUit kiddmg yourself
Jom the Payroll Savmgs Plan
where you work Its easy Just
spec1fy an amount you want set
aside from your paycheck Then
that money IS used to buy US
Savmgs Bonds You never Sf'e the
money, so the temptatiOn to spend
1t IS removed And w1thevery pay
check your money gtows So
when you need 1t yo u 11 find
you ve got a sizeagle amount
stashed away Enough to help out
with what tomorrow may brmg
If you can t trust yourself, trust
U S Savmgs Bonds Then you'll
have a fund m your future

A Flavor!
Drive In for a delicious sundae, shake,
malt or cone. Let us fill your party
needs, too.

McCLURE'S
4th&amp; Locust

'

992-5248

Middleport' 0

Take stock in America.
Jom the PayrollSavmgsPlan

�5-The DilDy Sentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy,O.,Sept. 25,1972

~~~~I; ~Uddlepprt-Poimer,,y,O., Sept. 25,1972

Win Twinbill, 5-4, 8-3
Tigers m the tight Eastern
division race.
In other Amur1can League
games, Baltimore edged Milwaukee, 4-3, California nipped
Minnesota, 2-1, Chicago
tr1pped Te&lt;as, 7-4, and
Oakland split a twinbill with
Kansas City •the Royals laking
the fi..St game, 4-2, and the A's
commg back to win the
· htca 2-1
rug
p, ·
ln the National League, New
York beat Philadelphia, 2-1,
Montreal nipped p 1ttsburgh, 2was upset by No. 11 Michigan, bulled his way into the end zone I, St. Louis edged Chicago in
26-S, Nebraska, ranked e1ghth, twice from a yard out and 10, 2-1, San Diego nipped
proved it was thl4l0Werhouse Charlie Dllvis scampered three Atlanta, 2-1, Cincinnati romped
"2
d Los
everyone had predicted m pre- yards for another TO all m the past Hous!on, 1"'•
an
season, by annihilating Army, second quarter as Colorado Angeles blanked San Francisco, 7-0.
71-7.
wore down Minnesota.
Jim Palmer collected his
No. 9 LSU clobbered Te1as
Gary Valbuena, a backup
A&amp;M; 42-17, and No. 10 Arizona quarterback tossed three tOOth major league victory and
State blasted Kansas state, 56- touchdown passes In relief of scored the winning run on
14.
Conrad Graham, who threw Bobby Gnch's ninth-inning sinThe Trojans from USC fell one and ran for another, as gle as Baltimore beat
behind early to Dlinms but Tennessee breezed past Wake Milwaukee.
Rudy May scattered seven
rallied to score 3li points in the Forest.
second half to win easily at
ln other games; Georgia hits and rookie Chris Coletta
Champaign, Ill. Actually it was Tech upset 12th..-anked Michi- hit his first major league
a touchdown scored by John gan State, 21-16, No. 13 (tie) homer as California defeated
McKay, son of the Trojans' Notre Dame shut out Nor- Minnesota .
Mike Andrews snapped an
coach that put USC abead to thwestern, 37~, in their season
eighth
inmng tie with a
stay. McKay scored another debut while PeM state, No. 13,
sacrifice fly and Dick Allen
TO late in the game and An- got past Navy, 21-10.
thony DAv1s ran for two more
No. 15 Texas opened its followed w1th a two-run homer
scores to pace the USC attack. season on a happy note by m Chicago's win over Te&lt;as.
Oakland's Reggie Jackson
Oklahoma ran up 609 yards defeating Mimai (Fla.), 23-10,
on the ground as their No. 16. Florida State downed singled, stole second and third
Wisebone completely Virginia Tech, 27-15, and 17th- and then scored the wmning
devestated the hapless Ducks. ranked Washington edged run in the ninth Inning on a
throwing eM"or by rightf1elder
Freshman Joe Washington ran Purdue, 22-21.
for two touchdowns and
No. 18 Iowa State rallied to steve Hovley in the second
quarterback Dave Robertson down Utah, 44-22, Tulane game to gain a split of the
passed for two more to lead the stuMed No. 19 Georgia, 24-13, doubleheader and allow the
Sooners
and 20th-ranked Arkansas Athletics !o keep a 3 l'z game
Q.larterback Ken Johnson edged Oklahoma State, 24-2.'!. margm between them and
second place Chicago in the AL
;:r-·:.-~~~~~-::::;:: :·:=:::·:·:·:···:·:-::;:;:;.;:;.;:::::::::::::·.·:·:·~::·:·:·:·:-:::-·:::·:·:·:::::::·:::::::::·:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.~:::::::::::: West. The Royals won the
~
X opener on five singles m the
seventh which produced three
runs and gave them a 4-ll lead
A run-scormg smgle by
Jackson and a double by Mike
:Ill Epstein netted the A's their
only runs in the ninth.
:::
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Edilor
saves as the Yankees swept a
doubleheader from the Cleveland Indians, 5-4 in 11 lanings
and 11-3, to move w.ithin three
games of the American League
Eastern division-leading
Boston Red Sox.
Lyle relieved with two on and
none out in the ninth mmng of
the nightcap and retired the

reliever
.....~ .. of the
the major
and set a new
wgue mark for

side In order in remarkable
fashion with two strikeouts and
a soft groundout to end the
game.
A two-run homer by Reggie
Smith and a three..-un blast by
Rico Petrocelli powered
Boston to a 7-2 victory over
Detroit and restored the Red
Sox's one-game edge over the

Teams Pour It On
l&gt;~• International

game continued
the nation's top
teams ran it
California did
their top
lllinois, 55-

on
move

UCLA

Major League Leaders
By Unlled Preso lnternalional
Leading Batters
National League
g ab r h pet.
Wilms, Ch1 U4 550 91 184 .335
Cdeno, Hou 132 535 101 174 .325
Baker. Atl 120 415 60 135 .325
Garr, Atl
127 521 82 167 .321
Olvr, Pilt
133 536 84 169 .315
Brock, St L 146 599 79 187 .312
Rose, Cin
147 617 103 191 .310
Santo, Chi 127 442 63 137 .310
W1sn, Hou 142 529 71 163 .308
Strgll, P1tt 130 466 12 142 .305
American League

g ab

r h pet.

Carew, M1nn

135 517 60 167 .323
145 498 90 154 .309
142 sn 93 178 .308
128 429 59 132 .308
143 .543 63 166 .306
·Mar.C~1 14015 81 ISS .301
· fis~. Bos
Ji3 430 72 129 .300
QtJ$&gt;KC
135 so7 70 150 .296
Mybrty I&lt;C 141 478 59 140 .293
·Bern,
112 3S2 38 112 .293
\lome ~uns
.
· National ~ag~e' Colbert, SO
38 ) B..,cn, Cin 37, Williams,
Chil-4; Star!j'ell. Pill 33, Aaron,
'1\tl' 3l
D.AIIen, Chi
Rudi ,Oak
,Shbl.m, I&lt;C .
P-rilla, XC

c.;,· ·

Amlr\c;.an League: D Allen,

Chi .7, Murcer. NY 30;
Killebrew/ Minn. Epstein and
J~ck$on, Qak 25.
'
Runs Balled In
National League : Bench, Cin

117; Williams, Ch1 114, Stargell ,
Pill 112; Colberl, SO 104; M;,y,

Hou 97.
American League: D. Allen,
Chi 112 ; Mayberry, KC 94 ;
Mur~er, NY 90, Scott, M1i 83;
Powell, Bait and Darwm , Mtnn

78.

P1lching

National

League :

Carlton,

Phil 25 ID ; Jenkins. Chi 20.12;
Seaver, NV 19.12; Blass, Pitt
18·7, 0steen, LA 18·10.
American League: Wood, Chi
24·15; Perry, Clev 22 16,
Palmer, Ball 21 ·9, Lolich, Del
21·13; Hunter , Oak 20 7; Bahn&gt;en. Chi 20-15

Local Bowling
POMEROY LANES
Bantam League
September 16, 1092
Pis.
!!all Bombers
6
Ilea Barons
4
CycJ~nes
2
lla~ana Splits
2
AIIStars
2
Pin·Bvsters
2
li!Qh lnd Game
David
&amp;tl 127. an&lt;t Todd Rawlings
121 : High Ser111s - Uavid ~urt
218 11nd l'odd Rawling s 215,
1'eam H1g~ Game - Red
Barons 715, Team H1gh Series
~ Ball Bombers 1346
~alurday

S~ulrd,ay Junior League

September 16, 1972

lmp;tt!s
,.;u:susters
Apatbes

Rern.s

Pis.
8
6

sv,

3'1'2

Or:Oamers
2
Alley Cats
2
High ' tnd Game - Steve
l!jJe~net m and Sieve Bachner
115; · l:flgh. Series - Steve
BacMer Sl~ and Chuck Follrod
398 Tei!m H1gh Game lmJ)&amp;cls84S , Toam High Series
~ ltnpacls 2499.
SaiUrday Sen1or League
Seplember 16, 1m

Pis.
Dlng.A·l.ings
6
6
Gullet Dusters
Pin Crushers
s
lil!rbles
4
Born Looers
3
Pin Busters
3
High lnd Game - R1ch
Ballefl88 and Gene DaviS lBO;
Hiqh Series - Gene DaviS 501
and Rich Bailey 474, Team
High Game - Gutter Dusters
iM; Team High Series - Pin
(:rushers l201.
Wed. Afternoon Leogue
. September 30
Won
Gaul's S~ake Haven
14
LO&lt;Iwlck's'Mkt.
10
Royal C:rown Cola
8
Rl~nour'tTV
8
Good''
Penntoll
8
High Incl. Game- Jo Hlll148
.and P~arl Russell 132
Hlgn lnct. Series - Judy.
Ginther .372 and Pe11rl Russell
,..um Hlgll Gome-T'eam 1
Gaul 's Shake Haven, 319:
Tum High Series- team 1.
·L~I.ck'a M!t~k~l, 832.
f

'

J Today's

ISport Parade

il

t

NEW YORK (UP I )-Roger Staubach, trymg to work his way
back from a separated shoulder, made a pomt of seekmg out
Craig Morton, his quarterback replacement with the Dallas
Cowboys, before they left home for their ball game here.
"Good luck," he said to Morton. "Have a great game."
Roger Staubach and Craig Morton are friends, better friends
than you usually lind when two men are competing for the same
pos1tion, so Morton knows Staubach was sincere m hlS good
wishes.
The Cowboys beat the New York Giants, 23-14, Sunday 10 a
contest generally closer than expected and Craig Morton did all
nght, but he didn't have what anybody would call a great game.
Most of '!he passes he connected on were short ones. He hit on 15
of the 27 he tried, whtch was better than .500, and he threw one
touchdown pass to Lance AIworth two nunutes belore the end to
wrap up a ball game the Cowboys already had won, but his total
of !58 yards easily might have been overlooked in tbe face of four
lme catches by Billy Parks or the three field goals, includmg one
54-yarder, booted by little Toni Fntsch of Vienna, Austria.
When th~ ball game was over though, many were primanly
interested 10 Tom Landry's assessment of Morton.
"Your ball club has won its first two now. Whadd 'ya do wben
Staubach comes back, do you go with him or stay with Morton'"
was the first question the Cowboys' coach was hit with following
the game.
Tom Landry, being a gentleman, didn't over..-eact to the
bluntness or the tlmlng of tbe question as perhaps some others
might.
"I don't know," he confessed. "It would be hard to change a
winning combination Right now I'd stay with Morton."
How well did Landry think Morton had done against the
Giants?
"Craig handled himself fairly well," said the Dallas coach.
But one of Landry's questioners persisted. What did he mean
by ''fairly well?"
Tom Landry doesn't stampede easily. DuWle Thomas couldn't
do 1t in two years so no newspaperman was likely to in two
minutes.
"He was all right," Landry replied, evenly. "I don't think he
had a good passing game, but Parks was the br1ght spot."
Fine, but what about Morton?
"I think be'll improve when he plays," went on tbe Cowboys'
coach. "He's throwing the ball all right and he's reading the
defenses."
Morton conceded he made some mistakes. But pressed 1o
evaluate his own performance, he said:
"Overall, I'm satisfied."
It was then he was told what Landry had !o say, specifically
that the Dallas coach hadn 't been overly charmed by his passing
game.
Morton looked as If he was about to say something to that,
mind .
"What if Staubach was ready to play nell week?" somebody
wanted to know .
"I'd still be tbe quarterback," Morton said firmly.
"You really believe that?"
"Darn right, I believe it."

Saturday's

College- Football
Scores
By Umted Press International

Ma1or League Standon9s
American League
r.v Umfed Press International
East
Nal1onal League
w I. pel. g.b.
East
Boston
80 66 .548
w. I. pet. g.b. Detroit
80 68 .541 1
Ball1more
78 69 .531 2112
x
Pittsburgh
92
55
626
Chtcago
81 66 551 11
New York
78 70 .527 J
New York
76 70 521 15'h Cleveland
67 83 .447 15
Sl LOUIS
71 78 A77 22
Mil waukee
61 87 412 20
Montreal
67 79 459 24•/'2
West
Philadelphia 55 92 374 37
w I. pet. g.b
wesl
Oakland
87 60 .592
w. I. pet. g.b. Ch1cago
83 63 568 31/'2
)l C1nc~nnat1
91 56 619
75 70 .517 11
Mtnnesota
Houston
81 65 555 9'1' Kansas City 72 74 .493 14 1/~
Los Angeles 80 67 544 11
69 78 .469 18
Cal1fornta
Allanta
68 79 463 23
Texas
52 94 .356 34 1/~
San Francisco 63 85 426 28'1'
Sunday's Results
San D1 ego
56 89 386 34
Boston 7 Delro•t 2
x- Cimched D1v1S10n T1tle
Balhmore 4 M•lwauk ee 3
Sunday's Resulls
New York 5 Cleveland 4 (1st,
New York 2 Philadelphia 1
11 1nn l
Montreal 2 Pittsburgh 1
New York 8 Cleveland 3 {2nd I
St LouiS 2 ChiCago 1 {10 inn)
Kansas C1ty 4 Oakland 2 I lstl
San 01ego 2 Atlanta 1
Oakland 2 Kansas City 1
CinCinnati 10 Houston 2
I 2nd I
Ch1cago 7 Te)CaS 4
0 los Angeles 7 San FranCISCO
Saturday's Results
New YorkS Ph1ladelph1a 3
Montreal 3 Prttsburgh 0

ChiCago 2 St. LouiS 0 {1st )
ChiCago 15 St LouiS 1 {2nd)
Los Angeles 7 San Franc1sco

4
San D1ego 4 Atlanta 1
Houston 7 C1nc•nnal! 1
Today's Probable Pitchers

{All T1mes EDTI

San D1ego (Norman 9-10) at
11

Los Angeles {Qsleen 18-101.
pm
{Only game scheduled I

Tuesday's Games
Ch1cago at Montreal (n1ght)
P1tlsburgh at Philadelphta

{n1ghl)

New York at Sf. LOUIS (nig ht)
Atlanta at Cinc1nnut1 (night)
San Franc1sco at Houston

(n 1ghll

San Otego al
(11 1Qh0

Los Angeles

Maior League Results

By United Press lnler nafional
Naf10nal league
Phtladelph•a

000 000 IOD- 1 5 I
10000001x- 2 70

NewYork

WP Seaver {19 121
{JJ!hl, B Rob~nson

Nebraska 77 Army 7

14

New Hampsh1re 16 Boston U

Vtllanova 20 W1ll1am &amp; Mary

17

South
Alabama 35 Ken l ucky 0
Auburn 14 Chattan ooga 7
Drake 23 Memph1s Stale 7

LSU 42 Texas AS.M 17
Maryland 28 VMI 16

M ISSISSippi 21 South Carol1na

0
North Carolma
Carol•na St 33

34

North

SM U 21 Flor~da 14
Stanford 10 Duke 6

Caltfornta (Ryan 17 15) at
Texas (Bosman 7-9), 8 30 p m.

M1nnesota {Corbin 8 81 al
Oakland (Holtzman 18·11), 11
pm
{Only games scheduled I

Tuesday's Games
Milwaukee at Boston (n•ght)
C I eve I an d at Bait• more

(n1ghil

oi

Cal•forn 1a at Texas (night)
Kansas City at Ch1cago

{night)

M 1nnesota at Oakland (n •gh t)
(only games scheduled)

n1el (9} and Munson , Lamb,
Kilkenny (5), Farmer (5),
R1ddleberger (6). Mtngor. (9)
and Moses WP McDan•el (3 1)
LP M.ngor1 (0 6)

ARGUMENT IN

FAVOR OF

PROPOSED AMENDMENT
I~

approved by the voters at
111e November elect1on , tl1e
proposed amendment to Oh 1o's
conSt i tUtion would greatly
1mprove the opportun.ty o f the
publi C to participate tn the
dec1s•on as to how , and how
mu cl1 , II 1S to be fa )led For the
f.rst ltme th e publ1 c would have
the nght to vote on taxat 1on and
government spendmg at the
stat e level
T11e taw already guarantees
lhe publ 1c this rtght of con trol at
the locallevelm the f 1eld of real
estate taxes and muniC ipal
mcome taxes
If approved. the constitutiOn
would then prov 1de that the ra t e
of state •ncome taxallon must
be the same for all nalural
persons
The
constllul10n
alre.,dy requires that the rate
and va 1va11n lor prop erty taxes
must be the same for all tax
payers
The
amendmenl
wou l d
prov1de for 1ncome ta){af•on
ba sed upon ab ili ty to pay , that
IS , the greater a taxpayer 's
mcome , the more ta x he would
pay. the smaller a taxpayer's
.ncome1, the less te,., t'tt would

Wilcox , Hilgendorf ( 1). Butler

Montreal
000 010 100- 2 tO 0 14) , lopez (61. Farmer {91 and
Piltsburgh 000 000 001- I 50 Fosse WP Gardner {8 4) LP
Morton (7.131 and McCarver. Wdco)( (7 14) HRs Bevacqua
Moose, Johm.on (B) and San - Iistl. Bell {91hl Murcer (30th I
( 10 .nnmgs)

Ch1cago
St LOUIS

000 100 000 D- t 53
000 100 000 1- 2 8 0

Hands, Aker ( 10) and Hen·
dncks , W1se (16 16) and Jutze

San D1ego
Allan fa

Our Interest Is
MORE for YOU

Detroit
100 010 ooo- 2 7 1
Boston
400 030 OOx- 7 9 1
Fryman , Seelbach {51, Slay.
back (7) and S1ms , T1ant (14 5)
and Ftsk LP Fryman (8 3)

HRS Sm1ih {21stl , Petrocelli
l 15ih I

000 200 ooo- 2 5 0 Balt1more
010 000 OOD- I 2 I Milwaukee

K1rby , Cork1ns
(6)
and
Kenda l l , McQueen, House (9)

000 200 101 - 4 11 0
200 000 001 - J B 1
Pa lmer , Watt (9) and Oates ,
L1nzy
{B)
and
l ockWood ,
Rodnguez WP Palmer (21 -9)

and D1d1er WP Kirby 112 14)
LP McQueen {0 4) HR Williams LP Lckwood 17 141
(27th I
(8ihl

C1ncinnah 010 012 42Q-10 15 2
Penn St 21 Navy 10
Houston
001 000 100- 2 6 0
Rhode Island 27 Northeastern
Blllmgham, Borbon (6), Car
7
rol l (9) and Bench, Ruberto

Rutgers 41 Leh1gh 13

BE IT RESOLVED by ihe

people of the Stat e of Oh 1o
Laws may be passed prov1ding
for the ta xat1 on by the state or
any poltfical subd lv1S10n th ereof
of the Incomes of both ( 1)
natural persons and (21 cor poratiOns , other
bus1ness
organizations and taxable
ent1 tles, and any such ta x sha lt
be at a non .graduatl!d rate
w1th1n each of the
two
class•ficatfons, and may be
applied to such 1n comes as may
be designated by law Prov1ded
however , thai with the ex'
ceplion of Investments m in
tangible personal property, no
law shalf be enacted by the
General Assemb ly and no
e)(lstlng or future law sha ll be
enforced by any off1cer of th 1s
state or subd•v•s•on thereof
1mposlng ,
collec ttng
or
otherwise levvmo any la Kon, or
measurmo any tax by, mcome
of
natural
persons, cor poratiOns , or otl'1er busmess
organtzat.ons and taxable
ent.t1es or •ncreas1ng the rate s
thereof unless such ta x or m
crease 1s approved by at lea st a
majority of the etectros of the
state or of the subd1V1S10n
votmo on such proposlat•on
Nothing conta•ned herem shall
prevent the co llection of, or tbe
enforcement of the law relalmg
to, any ta x t1abil1ty which ha s
accrued prior to the ettect1ve
date of th1s sec t1on
The questions of such a tal( on
1ncomes or mcrease In the rates
thereof shall be subm1t1ed a t a
general elechon to the electors
Of fhi SS fate Or Of the SUbdiVISIOn
for their approval or retect•on
1n a manner prescr1bed by law
Prov•ded fu r th er , however
that this sect •on shall not affect
the author1ty of muni Ci palitieS
subject to the prov1s •ons
Sec t1on 6, Art icle XIII and
Sec t1on lJ, Art1cte XVIII of this
Conslltulion to 1mpose, collect ,
or otherw1se levy any tal( on, or
to measure any tax by , mcome
of
natural
persons,
cor
poral1on s, or other bus1ness
oroan1zat1ons and taKable
en t1t1 eS , or to Increase th e rates
lhereor

{All T1mes EDT)

%

HR · Bia~r

PAID ON
PASSBOOK
SAVINGS

Cali f ornia
010 000 010- 2 6 0
M1nnesola
000 000 OlQ- 1 7 0
May (1 1 11) and Kusnyer ,
Perry, LaRoche (9) and Mtller

{61 . Forsch . Ray {61. Culver wa ld LP Perry 11315). HRS
(61. Cosgrove {7) , York (9) and Coletta {1stl. Soderholm {121h) .
Edwards WP Billingham {11
121 LP Forsch (5 71 HRs Texas
001 300 ooo- 4 9 0
McRae (5th)
Ch1cago
001 210 03x- 7 15 2

pay

A "YE S" vote on the ISSUe IS
necessary to accomplish the
l ollow ing
( 1} Proh1b1t col leclron of the
present income and mcome
retaled tu ,
( 2 ) Give th e publiC the nght to
vote on any proposed mcome
ta)C m the future (ucept
mun1C1pal tal() ,
( J ) RtQu1re publiC approval
before any proposed mcrease of
any such tax. could take effect
The effect , It any , wh1 Ch
approval of the conSf ltU I Ional
amendment might have on
current state ex.pend• tvr es will
on ly last for SI)C months But the
control by the publ•c over el(
cessl~e
state government
spend.ng will be 11 permanent
part of OhiO s const•tut1on tl'1a t
nor
ne 1tt1er
go..-ernor
legislature. now or 1n the future ,
can ever take away from the
people
The November election may
be the last chance that Oh •oans
ever get to control d1rectly
runaway spendmg at the state
level
Committee lor the Amend
ment Chester T Cru ze, Robert
E Levitt , Joseph • p
Tulley ,
Raymond P Luther, Howard A
Kn1ght

Gogolewsk1 , L1ndblad (4),
Pma (4), Htnton (5), Broberg

San FranCisco

000 000 QOO- 0 4 1• 181. Stanhouse 181 and Billings .
Los Ange les 120 11002x- 7141 Wood , Acosta {5) , Gossage {71,
Barr, Sosa {4). Reberger {6). Forster (9) and Herrmann WP
McMahon { 8) and Rader , Gossage (7 01 LP Hmton (I t1
Down •ng (9 8) and Yeager LP- HRs Ford ll41hl , D Allen
Barr {7 10) HR Davis {181h)
137ih I

MEIGS BRANCH

The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co.

Amencan league
( 1st, 11 mn1ngs)

{lsi game)
Kansa s C1ty 001 000 3QO- 4 7 1
000 OJO 000 02- 5 10 I O..kland
000 000 002- 2 7 2
Montgomery , Abernathy (9)
001 100 010 01 - 4 14 5
State 6
K1rkpafnck , Taylor (7) ,
Stotllemyre. Lyle {7), McDa and
West V•rg•ma 48 V1rgin 1a 10
Odom . Knowles {7), Locker {71.
Mtdwest
Horlen {9) and Duncan . WP·
Bowling Green 16 M1am 1
Montgomery {3 2) LP Odom
&lt;Ohiol 7
{14 6) HR Schaal {61hl - Colorado 38 Mtnnesota 6
{2nd game )
Tears
Are
Necessary
Dayton 39 Marshall 0
Kansas
100 ooo- 1 8 I
Tears continually bathe OaklandC1ty 000
Georgta Tech 21 Mtchtgan Sf
010 000 001- 2 6 0
16
the cornea, thus helping it to
Murphy, Angelini {91. Abet·
H•llsdale 26 Ohro Northern 7 clear It of foreign particles, nathy {9) and Taylor , Hamil
Iowa 19 Oregon St. 11
such as dust and hairs, and ton, F1ngers (B) and Tenace
Iowa Sl 44 Utah 22
ke~p it from drying out, WP F~ngers {10 8) LP.Murphy
Kansas 52 Wy ommg 14
wh1ch would result in bhnd· (43)
Kent St 37 Oh1o U 14
North Dakota 33 South ness.
Dakota 3
Tennessee 45, Wak e Forest 6
New York
Tulane 24 Georg•a 13
Cleveland
Vanderbtlt
10 M1ss•sstpp1

Earl F. Ingels, Jr .• Mgr.
PHONE 992-3863

" II Makes Sense To Save With The People
Who Care"

Notre Dame 37 Northwestern

0

20

Oklahoma 68 Oregon 3

Texas 23 M1am1 10
Texas Tech 21 New Mextco 16
Tnn1ty 13 SW LOUISiana 10
Wtchila 6 Arkansas St . 0

Southern Callforn•a 55 llt.no1s

TCU 31 lnd1ana 28

Wash1ngton 22 Purdue 21
Western M1ch1gan 14 North
ern lllmo1s 10
Wisconsm 31 Syracuse 7
Xavter 19 Cmcrnnat 1 7
Southwest
An zona State 56 Kansas State

14

Arkansas 24 Okalhoma St 23
Lamar 7 South ern lll•nots 0
R1ce 29 Clemson 10

West

Air Force 41 P1tlsburgh 13

M1eh1gan 26 UCLA 9
17

Montana 40 Northern An zona

SEPTEMBER

SAVINGS

San Diego 17 Claremont.Mudd

7
San Jose

St. 17 Calfforn•a 10

Utah St. 42 BYU 19

Vanderbtlt 10 M•ssisstppi St. 6
Washtngton Sf 28 Anzona 6

.N. ·W. COMPTON, O.D.
.

OPTOMWIST

OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 ~CLOSE
:AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST

J,._

~

"

. c'

'•t•._,

.

I

••

JUST FOR BEING NICE, Frances Scholl, owner and opera !or of Court Street Grill was
presented an orchid and a cake by members of Carpenter Local 650 Presenting Mrs. Scholl
w1th the orchid is Pomeroy Mayor William Baroruck. Seated at the U.ble are members of Local
650, Antle Brickey, Vernon Hysell, Bob Rathburn, Gene Clark, D1ck Hayman, Terry Proffitt,
Jun Hobstetter, Don Earl Guinther, Mac VanMeter and Bill Bryant. Mrs . Scholl, who was
pleasantly surprised with the presentatiOn, observed, "No one has ever been so nice, I'm not
used to being surprised in such a mce way."

I--------------------------~I
Lellers of opinion are welcomed. They should be less I
I than 300 words long {or be sub)ecllo reduction by Ihe edilor) I

I

1 Wld musl be slgaed wllh the sognee's address. Names may be I
1 withheld upon pubhcatlon, ho11ever, on request. Letters I

I
lI

1 should be in good taste, addressing Issues. ool personRIItles.
I
0
I

lI
I

..d.eattd1/h
•• • %L~
:
"Vl·

I

I

1

Asks help with Prayers
Dear Chr1st1ans :
I have good news to tell you. My nephew has been dtscharged
from the Harmarville Rehabihtatwn Center for a while. He IS
able to dnve his own car wtth hand controls. I pray and ask Our
Lord that he will touch Roland 's body and give him feelmg m his
body and I pray and ask, Dear Lord, that he wlll walk by hunself
unmediately . Iask th1s all m Jesus precious name. Amen. Thank
God. Thank you for all your prayers
Please pray w1th me for:
A free country My first husband was m World War 11. My
oldest son was in the Vietnam War. God bless America, I pray
and ask
I pray and !ask that Commurusm be stamped out. 1pray and
ask that the dnug pushers be brought to the1r knees . 1 pray and
ask, Dear Lord1 t~.at you will burden their hearts and they will
turn to our Lord and be baptized.! pray and ask, Dear Lord, for
all lost souls hooked on drugs, tobacco and alcohol that you tay a
burden on their hearts and they w1ll turn to our dear Lord in
Jesus' precwus name. I pray and I ask that we have mmistry on
TV all day Sunday and also on radio stations. I pray and ask for
sacred mus1c on radio and TV all day &amp;!nday from now on.
I !JI'ay and ask, Dear Lord, that others be healed who are
paralyzed
Prayfully, Betty Lou Kern, Route I, Shade, Oh10

Hy United Press lnlematlonal
Today ts Monday, Sept. 25,
the 269th day of 1972 w1th 97 to
fo llow
The moon IS approaching 1!s
last quarter
The mormng stars are Venus,
Mars and Saturn.
The evemng stars are Mercury and Jup1ter.
Those born on this date are
under the stgn of L1bra.
American author Wilham C.
Faulkner was born Sept 25,
1897.
On this day in history :
In 1513, Spamsh e&lt;plorer
Vasco Nunez de Balboa became
the flrst known European to see
the Pactflc Ocean when he
crossed the Isthmus of Panama .
In 1789, the hrst Congress of
the Umted States adopted 12
amendments to the origmal
Constttut10n, 10 of whtch were
rat1fted and became known as
"the Blil of R1ghts."
In 1926, the Ford Motor
Company put Jts workers on an
eight-hour day, five-day-week
schedule for the first time.

If

'•

,.
J'

By the Popular Success of Our Noon
Buffet .
.,

'

AN EVENING
BUFFET

'• '

TUESDAY EVENING ONLY
5 to 9 3{)---$2 SO all you can eat, (or AI a Cartel

Today's Almanac

Hocking Tech Offering
Part-Time Day Courses
NELSONVILLE - Hocktng
Techmcal College ts offering,
along with its full-11mc day
program, a part-time day
program m all technologies
These part-tune day school
off enngs are designed for
those workmg second or third
sh1ft or for those whose home
dutJes allow them hm1ted
fre edom. These courses can
apply towards either an
assoctate degree, a technical
certtflcate, or be used as brushup or specaal tnterest courses.
Parttai hshng for part-time
day :
General Stud1es - Com·
mumcat10ns, Shde Rule, Math,
Pohtical Science, Psychology,
Speech, Techmcal Wroting
Public Service
In troductiOn to CorrectiOns,
Probahon &amp; Parole, Group
Interaction.
Engmeerong - Engoneerong
Draw1ng, IntroductiOn to
Electroc1ty.
Environmental Health
FJeld Biology, Commumty
Hea lth Adm1mstrat1on, Environmental Health I, Pubhc
Health
Law,
Basic
Photography
Business - Accounting,
Bustness &amp; Accountmg
Machmes, Business Machme
Duphcatmg, Computer Con·
cepts, Survey of Data, IntroductiOn lo Data, Reta1hng I,
Sales I, Shorthand I, Shorthand
Dictation and Transcr1pt10n,
Typmg I, Typing and Busmess
Machmes.
QuestiOns concermng these
courses should be dtrectcd to
R1chard Mitchell, Admissions
Officer, Ho cking Technical
College, Route I , Nelsonville,
Ohio 45764, or Telephone 7533514.

elsewhere. Hts work ts tn·
eluded tn many private
collectiOns He 1s skilled m
sculpture, des1gn, drawmg and
patnting. H1s awards mclude a
DaVmc1 Medal from I S.D.A
Cultural Hentage FoundatiOn,
and the Pope Paul VI B1shops
Medal for "Outstanding
contribution 111 the field of
Ltturg1cal Art."
Scrvmg w1th h1m on the Jury
are Cynth1a Bnngle, produc.
twn potter of Penland, N C.,
and Catherine Mtlovtch,
professor of Art and Des1gn at
Southern lihnots Umversity at
Edwardsville
The Martella College Crafts
Reg10nal w11l feature work of
artists,
craftsme n and
des1gners res1dtng m Oh10,

''

In 1970, the Umted States
warned the Soviet Umon
against butldmg a submanne
base m Cuba.

.'

.'
·'

A thought for the day
American author Wtlham
Faulkner satd, "I decline to
accept the end of man .

,.'

Refused Presidency
Albert Emstein was of.
fered the pres1dency of the
State of Israel when Pres!·
dent Chaim We!Zmann died
m 1952, but declmed th1s
honor, insisting that he was
not fitted for such a pos1!1on.

StJIRT
FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVItE
1:1 At 9-0ut At 5

Use Our Free Parkmg Lot

Robinson!s Cleaners
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

W1de M enu
Cho1ce

•:
·~

Drinks and
Dessert Extra.

·'

Order our regular menu every nigh t 5 to 10.

Have You Heard?

·,

HAPPY HOUR

·'
,'

,,

MON.-FRI. 4 TO 6 PM
PRETZELS &amp; PEANUTS ON BAR.
You'll bQ happy when you come here.

The MEIGS INN
PH. 992·3629

POMERdY.
''

'·

"'_,

J)~ss:A~PQU~is

a·happiness dUng.

,.
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llH

,,

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Enter our Dress-A-Doll Contest.

''

Financial Policy Questioned

,.

•,

En!

''Why?"

"Because I'm a damn good quarterback and I don 't think
Roger can beat me out right now. I've read you guy's columns.
You say I'm a lousy quarterback, and for awhile there I thought I
was bad. But I hadda be a little stronger with myself. I feel now
1t's fortWJate that Roger and I are w1th the Cowboys, I think
either of us can lead the team to the &amp;!per Bowl. The game out
there today' I don't think I did anything poorly. Maybe not
everything perfectly, but nothing poorly."
Morton later went Into the shower room 1111d wben he returned
somebody told him Landry hadn't actually been crillcal of him
· and It would be wrong for Morton to think that.
"Tom Landry'" Morton said. "I love him. I admire him
greatly."
It was obvious he meant it.
But Toni Fritsch, the chunky soccer.. tyle field goal kicker who
sUll gets a bit of old VleMa mtohis conversation, put a capon the
whole business .
"I know only wn zing sure," '&gt;e said In that delightful accent of
his. "1bree points for field goal."

.

;. ;..,." ;. ,
'' '"'~'. IM ;

MARIETTA - Virgil Cantim, professor and cha11'11l3n of
studio arts and art education at
the Univers~ty of Pittsburgh,
will be one of three jurors at
the Mar1etta College Crafts
Regwnal scheduled Nov. D-30
at Grover M. Hermann Fine
Arts Center.
Can tim holds a B.F.A. from
Carnegie
Institute
of
Technology and an M.A. from
the Univers1ty of Pittsburgh.
His work has been shown m
many exhibitions including the
anrrual exhibition of Associated
ArtiSts of P1ttsburgh (s1nce
1945) and the World's Fair at
Brussels in 1958
,
Hts sculpture, murals and
enamels appear tn many public
bUildings in Pennsylvania and

TO THE PEOPLE OF MEIGS COUNTY:
It has come to our attent10n that the employees of the
deparlments of the Me1gs County government have not had a pay
ra1se 10 ( 3) three year&lt; and that several of the employees of one
of the County Agencies have not been paid for several pay
periods. WHY ? The same procedure IS bemg done in 87 other
counties .
One may be led to th1nk th1s inJustice lies 10 the hands of the
commissioners, not so. The problem is with the Budget ComffilSSlOll which consist of the Treasurer, Auditor, and Prosecuting
Attorney.
Alaska's Flag
It seems that when these gentlemen need money for the1r
On Alaska's state flag , the
seven gold stars, represent· assistance it 1S available . We now have (4) four assistant
ARGUMENT IN
OPPOSITION TO
ing the state's gold-mimng m- Auditors, (2) assistant treasurers and (I) one assistant to the
PROPOSED AMENDMENT dustry, form the B1g Dipper. Prosecuting Attorney.
Vote NO on tuue ;r
Approvmg Issue 2 Will hurt An eighth star, in the corner,
Do we need these ass1stants'
YOU
is the North Star, symboJiz.
How many legal matters come !o the Prosecuting Attorney's
ing the state's locatwn m the
ISSUE 2 WILL DESTROY THE far
ofhce
10 a year?
north
HOMESTEAD EXEMPTION
How many checks does the auditor himself write per month'
AND 10 PCT PROPERTY TAX
RED UCTION
How many transactions does our treasurer do m a month'
Loss of the real estate ta )C
Mary's Mother
Please , can someone tell us?
reductions th e corpora t e and
Saint Anne 1s traditionally
personal Income taxes made
What
the employees of Meigs County should do Is form a
poss1ble
would
cost regarded as the w1fe of
hom&amp;owners who are over 6&lt;t, Joachim and the mother of union, and ask for a pay increase to compensate for the cost of
yearly tax sa v ings amoun t ing to
as much as 80 pet of the1r the Virgin Mary. Her life is living, to be sure that people do not go unpaid and for better
property taxes and would take found only in the apocryphal working conditions for all.
away all other taxpayers ' 10 books of the New Testament.
lt is high time for the people of Meigs County to wake-up and
pet real estate ta x rollback.
question such actions.
ISS UE 2 WILL CAUSE OTHER
One other question weforgot to ask, where is the $400,000 that
NEW AND INCREASED
TAXES FOR INDIVIDUALS . Joan of Arc was 17 years is in the county's general fund?
Supporters of I ssue 2 don ' t old when she defeated the
ln closing we would like to bring the Budget Commission to
want reduced spendrno . Tl'1ey army of
Ian d's King
want to shift the burden of Henry VI an won a crown
reality, it is not long before you ( 3) three, are to be re-elected
taxat1on from the wealthy to the
average taxpayer by a flat for France's Charles VII.
(MAYBE).
1ncome ta)l wh1ch would
Thanks to the editor for publishing this letter.
DOUBLE ta xes for families
earning $9 ,000 or less and would
Signed, People for a Democratic County
reduce taxes ONLY for families ta )Ces be based on abiltiY to, pay .
(Name withheld on request)
earnlno over S18 ,SOO
DON'T BE MISLED INTO
ISSUE 2 WILL CAUSE PAYING MORE THAN YOUR Believes Tax
Unfair
Middleport, Ohio
HIGHER TAXES FOR THE FAIR SHARE FOR GOOD
GOVERNME
NT
SMALL BUSINESSMAN
Sept. 20, t972
Vote no on usue 2
Hlgh .prof l t
corporatio ns
Dear
Sir:
Committee
against
the
would save about SlSO mlll10n If
Amendment William w Tan,
Issue 2 passes. A flat rate tn
Would you please Print this in your paper. As Ive have Read
come ta)C tor all businesses, James J . Flannery, Oliver
this
statement on the Premisslve act Ucense Tax of addition
Inc luding partnerships and Ocas!k., E . W Lampson
proprletotshlps, would force all
$5.00. on Each set of Ucense that are Sold In side of the CorUNITED STATES
businesses to pay the same rate
poration. it also States that it would be used for Street Repair
OF AMERICA
STATE DF OHIO
ISSUE 2 WILL R.EDUCE
onely.
OFFICE OF THE
STATE SUPPORT TO YOUR
SECRETARY
OF
STATE
in theSentlniiDated August 27,1972 the Mayor of our VIllage,
COMMUNITY
I, TED W. BROWN, stated that this was a fair tax. I do not agree with that statement.
Oon 'l vote for a pig -In a poke .

296 W. Second. Pomeroy, 0.

r

Jurors for Crafts Regional

vf the Proposed

ARTICLE XII, Sect1on 8

(2nd game I
New York 401001 002- 8 12 0
HRS Agee Cleveland 100 011 ooo- 3 7 1
{6th)
Gardner, Lyle {9) and Ellis .

gulllen LP Moose (12 9)

4' '· ·

ConST•Iutlon.al Amendment

Carlton (25 10) and Bateman.
Seaver , McGraw (9) and Dyer

Bucknell 44 Dre)C el 0

Connecftcuf 7 Vermont 0
Cornell 34 Belo11 0
Fordham 22 Sf Peter 's 7
Hoi y Cross 30 Brown 24
Ma ssac hu setts 37 Ma• n 0

Propo1ed by
tn•tlahve Pelttion

~

Marietta College Department
of Art, and is supported by the
Fenton Art Glass Company of
Wllhamstown, W Va. Prizes
toU.l $3,:i00 including a special
Best Des1gn for Industry
Award of $500, to be presented
by the Fenlon Art Glass
Company.
Kentucky, Tennessee , North ·
Carolina, West V1rgima and
Further mformation about
Pennsylvma Works ehgtble MCCR may be obtained by
are glass, enamels, ceramics, writing to Manetta College
textiles, Jewelry, wood and Crafts Regional, Manetta
meta l
College, Mar1etta, Ohio 45750.
The show 1s sponsored by the

Prof. Cantini on Panel of

AMENDMENT TO
THE CONSTITUTION

Linescores

Easl
Boston College 49 Templ e 27 LPAker (66)
Colgate 33 Lafayette 14

Callforn 1a 2 Mmnesota 1
Salurday•s Resulls
New York 5 Cleveland 2 (6 1/ 2
1nmngs, ram)
Defrott 7 Boston 1
Mmnesota 2 Caltforn•a 1
Milwaukee 2 Balf!more 1
Oakland 2 Kansas City 1
Ch•cago 4 Te)Cas 3
Today's Probable Pitchers

LEGAL NOTICE

Hubal caJdweU to Jimmy C.
Caldwell, Sally A. Caldwell, 2
acre, Orange.
'
Milo Hutchmson, Betty A.
Hutch1son to Ohio Power Co.,
easement, Rutland.
Charles Wise, Geneva Wise
to Clarence A. Lawson, \! acre
{Galha) Meigs-Gallia.
Gloria J. Dalley, James L.
Gordon Collins, Celia Collins Dailey to Wtlson C. Hunt,
to Intra State Pipeline Co., Peggy Hunt, 6 acres, ColumInc , R1ght of Way, Olive.
bia
Betty A. Hutchison to Milo B.
Hutchison, parcels, Rutland.
Barnum's Beginning
Herbert Williams, Floss1e' D.
P. T Barnum, the world's
Stanley, Robert Stanley to most famous showman, be·
Manning D Webster, 76 acres, gan his career in 1835, with
the purchase and exhibltlon
Bedford
of
Joyce Heth, a Negro worn·
Mannong D. Webster, Mary
an
we1ghing only 46 pounds,
A. Webster to Herbert alleged
to have been George
Williams, Flossoe D. Stanley, Washmgton's nurse and re·
76 acres, Bedford.
ported to be over 160 years
Dana L. Channell to Byron old.
Bailey, parcels, Bedford.
Jesse Frazter, Elva Lee
Where tides come twice a
Frazier to Danny Kiser, day, the interval between
parcels, Salem
high and low water is a little
Howard B. Caldwell Sr., more than six hours.

Meigs
Property
Transfers

is

,. '
..'/·~'fit~·~.
. .···~
,. . • i '

.. . ......
..' . .'....,'
I

'
'•

···~

the

must elthtr be replaced by a

~

'

''

If the Income tax Is repealed, It

'

NO 918·1OOSER IES-"CLASSIC"

'
FOR BIG. DI~COUNT SAVINGS I

700 W. Main • Pomeroy
9 to 9 Dally-Sunday 1·9

,,. '

•, 1 I&lt;,

.. 1..,

The cl ~li!IC lmes of modern are ve•y much m ev1denre
In thiSillriCIIVC @IOUp lkau tl fUII)' finnhed 011 pccky

REGULAR 366.95

·'

pecan ve neers 1nd hardwDud solids, ftaiU/1111 Mu:ar t~

plashc tops and cust om designed ha•dw1ue

Bed. Chest, Dresser, Mirrors

--------------------------------·
INGELS FURNITURE

PH. 992-2635

'

MIDDLEPORT

'.'

.'
".

FLAT -RATE INCOME TAX ;
INCREASES
IN
REAL
ESTATE TAXES, CITY IN ·
COME TAXES. SALES TAXES,

TUITIONS. ETC ; or current
state aid must decrease for ·

Sec retary of State of I he Sta te of
Ohio. do hereby cer tify that the
foregoing Is a true copy of the
te"t of a proposed constitutional
amendment
Initiated
by
petttlon ,
together
wtth
arguments for Its actopt•on and
arguments against Its adopl1on ,
flied In the Office of the
Secretary
of
State
and
proposing to amend the abov~
Section of the Constitution ot

CITIES , COUNTIES, AND
TOWNSHIPS , . SCHOOLS AND UNIVER ·
SITIES;
Ohio.
MENTAL HEALTH ;
HOSPITALS
PUBLIC
IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF ,
ASSISTANCE;
CLEAN AIR AND WATER t have hereunto subscribed by
namt and affixed my official
ISSUE 2 WILL ELIMINATE' seal at Columbul the twenty .
FAIRNESS AND JUSTICE IN fourth day of September, 1972 .
OHIO'S TAX SYSTEM .
TEOW . BROWN
IIIUt 2 p1rm1t1 only I flit ·
Stcrttarv of State
rot• Income tu, llkt lhe cltv
Income t1x : It eliminates the
principle that Ohio voters

ISea II

odoptod In 1912. that Income (9) 25, (101 2. 9, 16, 23, Stc

if the CoWJty would pass this tax, then we could Call this a fair
tax. We Believe in being Honest and We are ta&lt;ed now so much
that we Cannot Vote for a tax for our Schools, our City officials
did Not Have enough. Courtesy or Respect for lhe people of our
Village to Have this tax put on the Ballot for the people to vote on.
If our officials think they can just set aroWJd the table and tell
people of our VIllage just what they have to do then Dl ask this
question. do we Uve Wider Dlcatorshlp. if not Lets all try to treat
Everyy one Equal unUll thla tax goes on couty or State wide Its an
Wlfalr tax I figure my $10.00 is worth as much inside the VIllage
as the other m1n with $10.00 out side the Corporation for Ht uses
our Streets much more than any one in slde the Corporation.
Sincerely yours
Verner H. See
344GrantSt.
Middleport, Ohio

.-

Wt' JW!'d your help Io llrln fl hJppines&gt;

m•t•rly t hilclrpn this Chmtmas. Come
Jtl tlow - ,upply ol doll s i' llllll lecl - and
pit k up" irt•e doll. Des1gn and &gt;ew an
I&gt;Ltltit tor il. !hen return 1t to us It will
IJp dt,piJyecl 111 our lobby w11h J ll lhe
f)rpss-A -Doll dolk Pr1z es will lw

lo

· I ~ .. O IM A· ~

·",.,
' I

''

{S) Co, , ~' ' ll hl 19 n by R cho•d Shtbb&lt;M wo d "'"""'" ' " ' IAt

The Farmers Bank &amp;· Savings Co.
POMElK)Y, OHIO
Member of Federal Reserve Svstem
On Fridays Our Drive-In Window is Open 91. m. lo 7 p, m. tConlinuoualy),

S20,0QO lto\uimum Insurance For Each Depositor

.,
'.•
I

'

I

awJrded. Don 't worry aboul st•wing
skill s. You r doll will find i1 home tn tht•
,1 rm' ol ,1 child on Chrostmas rl,1y , ,1ml
belo ved
You lllil ke Dre"·A-Doll* J , 1Jpp111ess
tlu ng Tlhtnk yuu

,• ''

r,
"

I

�5-The DilDy Sentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy,O.,Sept. 25,1972

~~~~I; ~Uddlepprt-Poimer,,y,O., Sept. 25,1972

Win Twinbill, 5-4, 8-3
Tigers m the tight Eastern
division race.
In other Amur1can League
games, Baltimore edged Milwaukee, 4-3, California nipped
Minnesota, 2-1, Chicago
tr1pped Te&lt;as, 7-4, and
Oakland split a twinbill with
Kansas City •the Royals laking
the fi..St game, 4-2, and the A's
commg back to win the
· htca 2-1
rug
p, ·
ln the National League, New
York beat Philadelphia, 2-1,
Montreal nipped p 1ttsburgh, 2was upset by No. 11 Michigan, bulled his way into the end zone I, St. Louis edged Chicago in
26-S, Nebraska, ranked e1ghth, twice from a yard out and 10, 2-1, San Diego nipped
proved it was thl4l0Werhouse Charlie Dllvis scampered three Atlanta, 2-1, Cincinnati romped
"2
d Los
everyone had predicted m pre- yards for another TO all m the past Hous!on, 1"'•
an
season, by annihilating Army, second quarter as Colorado Angeles blanked San Francisco, 7-0.
71-7.
wore down Minnesota.
Jim Palmer collected his
No. 9 LSU clobbered Te1as
Gary Valbuena, a backup
A&amp;M; 42-17, and No. 10 Arizona quarterback tossed three tOOth major league victory and
State blasted Kansas state, 56- touchdown passes In relief of scored the winning run on
14.
Conrad Graham, who threw Bobby Gnch's ninth-inning sinThe Trojans from USC fell one and ran for another, as gle as Baltimore beat
behind early to Dlinms but Tennessee breezed past Wake Milwaukee.
Rudy May scattered seven
rallied to score 3li points in the Forest.
second half to win easily at
ln other games; Georgia hits and rookie Chris Coletta
Champaign, Ill. Actually it was Tech upset 12th..-anked Michi- hit his first major league
a touchdown scored by John gan State, 21-16, No. 13 (tie) homer as California defeated
McKay, son of the Trojans' Notre Dame shut out Nor- Minnesota .
Mike Andrews snapped an
coach that put USC abead to thwestern, 37~, in their season
eighth
inmng tie with a
stay. McKay scored another debut while PeM state, No. 13,
sacrifice fly and Dick Allen
TO late in the game and An- got past Navy, 21-10.
thony DAv1s ran for two more
No. 15 Texas opened its followed w1th a two-run homer
scores to pace the USC attack. season on a happy note by m Chicago's win over Te&lt;as.
Oakland's Reggie Jackson
Oklahoma ran up 609 yards defeating Mimai (Fla.), 23-10,
on the ground as their No. 16. Florida State downed singled, stole second and third
Wisebone completely Virginia Tech, 27-15, and 17th- and then scored the wmning
devestated the hapless Ducks. ranked Washington edged run in the ninth Inning on a
throwing eM"or by rightf1elder
Freshman Joe Washington ran Purdue, 22-21.
for two touchdowns and
No. 18 Iowa State rallied to steve Hovley in the second
quarterback Dave Robertson down Utah, 44-22, Tulane game to gain a split of the
passed for two more to lead the stuMed No. 19 Georgia, 24-13, doubleheader and allow the
Sooners
and 20th-ranked Arkansas Athletics !o keep a 3 l'z game
Q.larterback Ken Johnson edged Oklahoma State, 24-2.'!. margm between them and
second place Chicago in the AL
;:r-·:.-~~~~~-::::;:: :·:=:::·:·:·:···:·:-::;:;:;.;:;.;:::::::::::::·.·:·:·~::·:·:·:·:-:::-·:::·:·:·:::::::·:::::::::·:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.~:::::::::::: West. The Royals won the
~
X opener on five singles m the
seventh which produced three
runs and gave them a 4-ll lead
A run-scormg smgle by
Jackson and a double by Mike
:Ill Epstein netted the A's their
only runs in the ninth.
:::
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Edilor
saves as the Yankees swept a
doubleheader from the Cleveland Indians, 5-4 in 11 lanings
and 11-3, to move w.ithin three
games of the American League
Eastern division-leading
Boston Red Sox.
Lyle relieved with two on and
none out in the ninth mmng of
the nightcap and retired the

reliever
.....~ .. of the
the major
and set a new
wgue mark for

side In order in remarkable
fashion with two strikeouts and
a soft groundout to end the
game.
A two-run homer by Reggie
Smith and a three..-un blast by
Rico Petrocelli powered
Boston to a 7-2 victory over
Detroit and restored the Red
Sox's one-game edge over the

Teams Pour It On
l&gt;~• International

game continued
the nation's top
teams ran it
California did
their top
lllinois, 55-

on
move

UCLA

Major League Leaders
By Unlled Preso lnternalional
Leading Batters
National League
g ab r h pet.
Wilms, Ch1 U4 550 91 184 .335
Cdeno, Hou 132 535 101 174 .325
Baker. Atl 120 415 60 135 .325
Garr, Atl
127 521 82 167 .321
Olvr, Pilt
133 536 84 169 .315
Brock, St L 146 599 79 187 .312
Rose, Cin
147 617 103 191 .310
Santo, Chi 127 442 63 137 .310
W1sn, Hou 142 529 71 163 .308
Strgll, P1tt 130 466 12 142 .305
American League

g ab

r h pet.

Carew, M1nn

135 517 60 167 .323
145 498 90 154 .309
142 sn 93 178 .308
128 429 59 132 .308
143 .543 63 166 .306
·Mar.C~1 14015 81 ISS .301
· fis~. Bos
Ji3 430 72 129 .300
QtJ$&gt;KC
135 so7 70 150 .296
Mybrty I&lt;C 141 478 59 140 .293
·Bern,
112 3S2 38 112 .293
\lome ~uns
.
· National ~ag~e' Colbert, SO
38 ) B..,cn, Cin 37, Williams,
Chil-4; Star!j'ell. Pill 33, Aaron,
'1\tl' 3l
D.AIIen, Chi
Rudi ,Oak
,Shbl.m, I&lt;C .
P-rilla, XC

c.;,· ·

Amlr\c;.an League: D Allen,

Chi .7, Murcer. NY 30;
Killebrew/ Minn. Epstein and
J~ck$on, Qak 25.
'
Runs Balled In
National League : Bench, Cin

117; Williams, Ch1 114, Stargell ,
Pill 112; Colberl, SO 104; M;,y,

Hou 97.
American League: D. Allen,
Chi 112 ; Mayberry, KC 94 ;
Mur~er, NY 90, Scott, M1i 83;
Powell, Bait and Darwm , Mtnn

78.

P1lching

National

League :

Carlton,

Phil 25 ID ; Jenkins. Chi 20.12;
Seaver, NV 19.12; Blass, Pitt
18·7, 0steen, LA 18·10.
American League: Wood, Chi
24·15; Perry, Clev 22 16,
Palmer, Ball 21 ·9, Lolich, Del
21·13; Hunter , Oak 20 7; Bahn&gt;en. Chi 20-15

Local Bowling
POMEROY LANES
Bantam League
September 16, 1092
Pis.
!!all Bombers
6
Ilea Barons
4
CycJ~nes
2
lla~ana Splits
2
AIIStars
2
Pin·Bvsters
2
li!Qh lnd Game
David
&amp;tl 127. an&lt;t Todd Rawlings
121 : High Ser111s - Uavid ~urt
218 11nd l'odd Rawling s 215,
1'eam H1g~ Game - Red
Barons 715, Team H1gh Series
~ Ball Bombers 1346
~alurday

S~ulrd,ay Junior League

September 16, 1972

lmp;tt!s
,.;u:susters
Apatbes

Rern.s

Pis.
8
6

sv,

3'1'2

Or:Oamers
2
Alley Cats
2
High ' tnd Game - Steve
l!jJe~net m and Sieve Bachner
115; · l:flgh. Series - Steve
BacMer Sl~ and Chuck Follrod
398 Tei!m H1gh Game lmJ)&amp;cls84S , Toam High Series
~ ltnpacls 2499.
SaiUrday Sen1or League
Seplember 16, 1m

Pis.
Dlng.A·l.ings
6
6
Gullet Dusters
Pin Crushers
s
lil!rbles
4
Born Looers
3
Pin Busters
3
High lnd Game - R1ch
Ballefl88 and Gene DaviS lBO;
Hiqh Series - Gene DaviS 501
and Rich Bailey 474, Team
High Game - Gutter Dusters
iM; Team High Series - Pin
(:rushers l201.
Wed. Afternoon Leogue
. September 30
Won
Gaul's S~ake Haven
14
LO&lt;Iwlck's'Mkt.
10
Royal C:rown Cola
8
Rl~nour'tTV
8
Good''
Penntoll
8
High Incl. Game- Jo Hlll148
.and P~arl Russell 132
Hlgn lnct. Series - Judy.
Ginther .372 and Pe11rl Russell
,..um Hlgll Gome-T'eam 1
Gaul 's Shake Haven, 319:
Tum High Series- team 1.
·L~I.ck'a M!t~k~l, 832.
f

'

J Today's

ISport Parade

il

t

NEW YORK (UP I )-Roger Staubach, trymg to work his way
back from a separated shoulder, made a pomt of seekmg out
Craig Morton, his quarterback replacement with the Dallas
Cowboys, before they left home for their ball game here.
"Good luck," he said to Morton. "Have a great game."
Roger Staubach and Craig Morton are friends, better friends
than you usually lind when two men are competing for the same
pos1tion, so Morton knows Staubach was sincere m hlS good
wishes.
The Cowboys beat the New York Giants, 23-14, Sunday 10 a
contest generally closer than expected and Craig Morton did all
nght, but he didn't have what anybody would call a great game.
Most of '!he passes he connected on were short ones. He hit on 15
of the 27 he tried, whtch was better than .500, and he threw one
touchdown pass to Lance AIworth two nunutes belore the end to
wrap up a ball game the Cowboys already had won, but his total
of !58 yards easily might have been overlooked in tbe face of four
lme catches by Billy Parks or the three field goals, includmg one
54-yarder, booted by little Toni Fntsch of Vienna, Austria.
When th~ ball game was over though, many were primanly
interested 10 Tom Landry's assessment of Morton.
"Your ball club has won its first two now. Whadd 'ya do wben
Staubach comes back, do you go with him or stay with Morton'"
was the first question the Cowboys' coach was hit with following
the game.
Tom Landry, being a gentleman, didn't over..-eact to the
bluntness or the tlmlng of tbe question as perhaps some others
might.
"I don't know," he confessed. "It would be hard to change a
winning combination Right now I'd stay with Morton."
How well did Landry think Morton had done against the
Giants?
"Craig handled himself fairly well," said the Dallas coach.
But one of Landry's questioners persisted. What did he mean
by ''fairly well?"
Tom Landry doesn't stampede easily. DuWle Thomas couldn't
do 1t in two years so no newspaperman was likely to in two
minutes.
"He was all right," Landry replied, evenly. "I don't think he
had a good passing game, but Parks was the br1ght spot."
Fine, but what about Morton?
"I think be'll improve when he plays," went on tbe Cowboys'
coach. "He's throwing the ball all right and he's reading the
defenses."
Morton conceded he made some mistakes. But pressed 1o
evaluate his own performance, he said:
"Overall, I'm satisfied."
It was then he was told what Landry had !o say, specifically
that the Dallas coach hadn 't been overly charmed by his passing
game.
Morton looked as If he was about to say something to that,
mind .
"What if Staubach was ready to play nell week?" somebody
wanted to know .
"I'd still be tbe quarterback," Morton said firmly.
"You really believe that?"
"Darn right, I believe it."

Saturday's

College- Football
Scores
By Umted Press International

Ma1or League Standon9s
American League
r.v Umfed Press International
East
Nal1onal League
w I. pel. g.b.
East
Boston
80 66 .548
w. I. pet. g.b. Detroit
80 68 .541 1
Ball1more
78 69 .531 2112
x
Pittsburgh
92
55
626
Chtcago
81 66 551 11
New York
78 70 .527 J
New York
76 70 521 15'h Cleveland
67 83 .447 15
Sl LOUIS
71 78 A77 22
Mil waukee
61 87 412 20
Montreal
67 79 459 24•/'2
West
Philadelphia 55 92 374 37
w I. pet. g.b
wesl
Oakland
87 60 .592
w. I. pet. g.b. Ch1cago
83 63 568 31/'2
)l C1nc~nnat1
91 56 619
75 70 .517 11
Mtnnesota
Houston
81 65 555 9'1' Kansas City 72 74 .493 14 1/~
Los Angeles 80 67 544 11
69 78 .469 18
Cal1fornta
Allanta
68 79 463 23
Texas
52 94 .356 34 1/~
San Francisco 63 85 426 28'1'
Sunday's Results
San D1 ego
56 89 386 34
Boston 7 Delro•t 2
x- Cimched D1v1S10n T1tle
Balhmore 4 M•lwauk ee 3
Sunday's Resulls
New York 5 Cleveland 4 (1st,
New York 2 Philadelphia 1
11 1nn l
Montreal 2 Pittsburgh 1
New York 8 Cleveland 3 {2nd I
St LouiS 2 ChiCago 1 {10 inn)
Kansas C1ty 4 Oakland 2 I lstl
San 01ego 2 Atlanta 1
Oakland 2 Kansas City 1
CinCinnati 10 Houston 2
I 2nd I
Ch1cago 7 Te)CaS 4
0 los Angeles 7 San FranCISCO
Saturday's Results
New YorkS Ph1ladelph1a 3
Montreal 3 Prttsburgh 0

ChiCago 2 St. LouiS 0 {1st )
ChiCago 15 St LouiS 1 {2nd)
Los Angeles 7 San Franc1sco

4
San D1ego 4 Atlanta 1
Houston 7 C1nc•nnal! 1
Today's Probable Pitchers

{All T1mes EDTI

San D1ego (Norman 9-10) at
11

Los Angeles {Qsleen 18-101.
pm
{Only game scheduled I

Tuesday's Games
Ch1cago at Montreal (n1ght)
P1tlsburgh at Philadelphta

{n1ghl)

New York at Sf. LOUIS (nig ht)
Atlanta at Cinc1nnut1 (night)
San Franc1sco at Houston

(n 1ghll

San Otego al
(11 1Qh0

Los Angeles

Maior League Results

By United Press lnler nafional
Naf10nal league
Phtladelph•a

000 000 IOD- 1 5 I
10000001x- 2 70

NewYork

WP Seaver {19 121
{JJ!hl, B Rob~nson

Nebraska 77 Army 7

14

New Hampsh1re 16 Boston U

Vtllanova 20 W1ll1am &amp; Mary

17

South
Alabama 35 Ken l ucky 0
Auburn 14 Chattan ooga 7
Drake 23 Memph1s Stale 7

LSU 42 Texas AS.M 17
Maryland 28 VMI 16

M ISSISSippi 21 South Carol1na

0
North Carolma
Carol•na St 33

34

North

SM U 21 Flor~da 14
Stanford 10 Duke 6

Caltfornta (Ryan 17 15) at
Texas (Bosman 7-9), 8 30 p m.

M1nnesota {Corbin 8 81 al
Oakland (Holtzman 18·11), 11
pm
{Only games scheduled I

Tuesday's Games
Milwaukee at Boston (n•ght)
C I eve I an d at Bait• more

(n1ghil

oi

Cal•forn 1a at Texas (night)
Kansas City at Ch1cago

{night)

M 1nnesota at Oakland (n •gh t)
(only games scheduled)

n1el (9} and Munson , Lamb,
Kilkenny (5), Farmer (5),
R1ddleberger (6). Mtngor. (9)
and Moses WP McDan•el (3 1)
LP M.ngor1 (0 6)

ARGUMENT IN

FAVOR OF

PROPOSED AMENDMENT
I~

approved by the voters at
111e November elect1on , tl1e
proposed amendment to Oh 1o's
conSt i tUtion would greatly
1mprove the opportun.ty o f the
publi C to participate tn the
dec1s•on as to how , and how
mu cl1 , II 1S to be fa )led For the
f.rst ltme th e publ1 c would have
the nght to vote on taxat 1on and
government spendmg at the
stat e level
T11e taw already guarantees
lhe publ 1c this rtght of con trol at
the locallevelm the f 1eld of real
estate taxes and muniC ipal
mcome taxes
If approved. the constitutiOn
would then prov 1de that the ra t e
of state •ncome taxallon must
be the same for all nalural
persons
The
constllul10n
alre.,dy requires that the rate
and va 1va11n lor prop erty taxes
must be the same for all tax
payers
The
amendmenl
wou l d
prov1de for 1ncome ta){af•on
ba sed upon ab ili ty to pay , that
IS , the greater a taxpayer 's
mcome , the more ta x he would
pay. the smaller a taxpayer's
.ncome1, the less te,., t'tt would

Wilcox , Hilgendorf ( 1). Butler

Montreal
000 010 100- 2 tO 0 14) , lopez (61. Farmer {91 and
Piltsburgh 000 000 001- I 50 Fosse WP Gardner {8 4) LP
Morton (7.131 and McCarver. Wdco)( (7 14) HRs Bevacqua
Moose, Johm.on (B) and San - Iistl. Bell {91hl Murcer (30th I
( 10 .nnmgs)

Ch1cago
St LOUIS

000 100 000 D- t 53
000 100 000 1- 2 8 0

Hands, Aker ( 10) and Hen·
dncks , W1se (16 16) and Jutze

San D1ego
Allan fa

Our Interest Is
MORE for YOU

Detroit
100 010 ooo- 2 7 1
Boston
400 030 OOx- 7 9 1
Fryman , Seelbach {51, Slay.
back (7) and S1ms , T1ant (14 5)
and Ftsk LP Fryman (8 3)

HRS Sm1ih {21stl , Petrocelli
l 15ih I

000 200 ooo- 2 5 0 Balt1more
010 000 OOD- I 2 I Milwaukee

K1rby , Cork1ns
(6)
and
Kenda l l , McQueen, House (9)

000 200 101 - 4 11 0
200 000 001 - J B 1
Pa lmer , Watt (9) and Oates ,
L1nzy
{B)
and
l ockWood ,
Rodnguez WP Palmer (21 -9)

and D1d1er WP Kirby 112 14)
LP McQueen {0 4) HR Williams LP Lckwood 17 141
(27th I
(8ihl

C1ncinnah 010 012 42Q-10 15 2
Penn St 21 Navy 10
Houston
001 000 100- 2 6 0
Rhode Island 27 Northeastern
Blllmgham, Borbon (6), Car
7
rol l (9) and Bench, Ruberto

Rutgers 41 Leh1gh 13

BE IT RESOLVED by ihe

people of the Stat e of Oh 1o
Laws may be passed prov1ding
for the ta xat1 on by the state or
any poltfical subd lv1S10n th ereof
of the Incomes of both ( 1)
natural persons and (21 cor poratiOns , other
bus1ness
organizations and taxable
ent1 tles, and any such ta x sha lt
be at a non .graduatl!d rate
w1th1n each of the
two
class•ficatfons, and may be
applied to such 1n comes as may
be designated by law Prov1ded
however , thai with the ex'
ceplion of Investments m in
tangible personal property, no
law shalf be enacted by the
General Assemb ly and no
e)(lstlng or future law sha ll be
enforced by any off1cer of th 1s
state or subd•v•s•on thereof
1mposlng ,
collec ttng
or
otherwise levvmo any la Kon, or
measurmo any tax by, mcome
of
natural
persons, cor poratiOns , or otl'1er busmess
organtzat.ons and taxable
ent.t1es or •ncreas1ng the rate s
thereof unless such ta x or m
crease 1s approved by at lea st a
majority of the etectros of the
state or of the subd1V1S10n
votmo on such proposlat•on
Nothing conta•ned herem shall
prevent the co llection of, or tbe
enforcement of the law relalmg
to, any ta x t1abil1ty which ha s
accrued prior to the ettect1ve
date of th1s sec t1on
The questions of such a tal( on
1ncomes or mcrease In the rates
thereof shall be subm1t1ed a t a
general elechon to the electors
Of fhi SS fate Or Of the SUbdiVISIOn
for their approval or retect•on
1n a manner prescr1bed by law
Prov•ded fu r th er , however
that this sect •on shall not affect
the author1ty of muni Ci palitieS
subject to the prov1s •ons
Sec t1on 6, Art icle XIII and
Sec t1on lJ, Art1cte XVIII of this
Conslltulion to 1mpose, collect ,
or otherw1se levy any tal( on, or
to measure any tax by , mcome
of
natural
persons,
cor
poral1on s, or other bus1ness
oroan1zat1ons and taKable
en t1t1 eS , or to Increase th e rates
lhereor

{All T1mes EDT)

%

HR · Bia~r

PAID ON
PASSBOOK
SAVINGS

Cali f ornia
010 000 010- 2 6 0
M1nnesola
000 000 OlQ- 1 7 0
May (1 1 11) and Kusnyer ,
Perry, LaRoche (9) and Mtller

{61 . Forsch . Ray {61. Culver wa ld LP Perry 11315). HRS
(61. Cosgrove {7) , York (9) and Coletta {1stl. Soderholm {121h) .
Edwards WP Billingham {11
121 LP Forsch (5 71 HRs Texas
001 300 ooo- 4 9 0
McRae (5th)
Ch1cago
001 210 03x- 7 15 2

pay

A "YE S" vote on the ISSUe IS
necessary to accomplish the
l ollow ing
( 1} Proh1b1t col leclron of the
present income and mcome
retaled tu ,
( 2 ) Give th e publiC the nght to
vote on any proposed mcome
ta)C m the future (ucept
mun1C1pal tal() ,
( J ) RtQu1re publiC approval
before any proposed mcrease of
any such tax. could take effect
The effect , It any , wh1 Ch
approval of the conSf ltU I Ional
amendment might have on
current state ex.pend• tvr es will
on ly last for SI)C months But the
control by the publ•c over el(
cessl~e
state government
spend.ng will be 11 permanent
part of OhiO s const•tut1on tl'1a t
nor
ne 1tt1er
go..-ernor
legislature. now or 1n the future ,
can ever take away from the
people
The November election may
be the last chance that Oh •oans
ever get to control d1rectly
runaway spendmg at the state
level
Committee lor the Amend
ment Chester T Cru ze, Robert
E Levitt , Joseph • p
Tulley ,
Raymond P Luther, Howard A
Kn1ght

Gogolewsk1 , L1ndblad (4),
Pma (4), Htnton (5), Broberg

San FranCisco

000 000 QOO- 0 4 1• 181. Stanhouse 181 and Billings .
Los Ange les 120 11002x- 7141 Wood , Acosta {5) , Gossage {71,
Barr, Sosa {4). Reberger {6). Forster (9) and Herrmann WP
McMahon { 8) and Rader , Gossage (7 01 LP Hmton (I t1
Down •ng (9 8) and Yeager LP- HRs Ford ll41hl , D Allen
Barr {7 10) HR Davis {181h)
137ih I

MEIGS BRANCH

The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co.

Amencan league
( 1st, 11 mn1ngs)

{lsi game)
Kansa s C1ty 001 000 3QO- 4 7 1
000 OJO 000 02- 5 10 I O..kland
000 000 002- 2 7 2
Montgomery , Abernathy (9)
001 100 010 01 - 4 14 5
State 6
K1rkpafnck , Taylor (7) ,
Stotllemyre. Lyle {7), McDa and
West V•rg•ma 48 V1rgin 1a 10
Odom . Knowles {7), Locker {71.
Mtdwest
Horlen {9) and Duncan . WP·
Bowling Green 16 M1am 1
Montgomery {3 2) LP Odom
&lt;Ohiol 7
{14 6) HR Schaal {61hl - Colorado 38 Mtnnesota 6
{2nd game )
Tears
Are
Necessary
Dayton 39 Marshall 0
Kansas
100 ooo- 1 8 I
Tears continually bathe OaklandC1ty 000
Georgta Tech 21 Mtchtgan Sf
010 000 001- 2 6 0
16
the cornea, thus helping it to
Murphy, Angelini {91. Abet·
H•llsdale 26 Ohro Northern 7 clear It of foreign particles, nathy {9) and Taylor , Hamil
Iowa 19 Oregon St. 11
such as dust and hairs, and ton, F1ngers (B) and Tenace
Iowa Sl 44 Utah 22
ke~p it from drying out, WP F~ngers {10 8) LP.Murphy
Kansas 52 Wy ommg 14
wh1ch would result in bhnd· (43)
Kent St 37 Oh1o U 14
North Dakota 33 South ness.
Dakota 3
Tennessee 45, Wak e Forest 6
New York
Tulane 24 Georg•a 13
Cleveland
Vanderbtlt
10 M1ss•sstpp1

Earl F. Ingels, Jr .• Mgr.
PHONE 992-3863

" II Makes Sense To Save With The People
Who Care"

Notre Dame 37 Northwestern

0

20

Oklahoma 68 Oregon 3

Texas 23 M1am1 10
Texas Tech 21 New Mextco 16
Tnn1ty 13 SW LOUISiana 10
Wtchila 6 Arkansas St . 0

Southern Callforn•a 55 llt.no1s

TCU 31 lnd1ana 28

Wash1ngton 22 Purdue 21
Western M1ch1gan 14 North
ern lllmo1s 10
Wisconsm 31 Syracuse 7
Xavter 19 Cmcrnnat 1 7
Southwest
An zona State 56 Kansas State

14

Arkansas 24 Okalhoma St 23
Lamar 7 South ern lll•nots 0
R1ce 29 Clemson 10

West

Air Force 41 P1tlsburgh 13

M1eh1gan 26 UCLA 9
17

Montana 40 Northern An zona

SEPTEMBER

SAVINGS

San Diego 17 Claremont.Mudd

7
San Jose

St. 17 Calfforn•a 10

Utah St. 42 BYU 19

Vanderbtlt 10 M•ssisstppi St. 6
Washtngton Sf 28 Anzona 6

.N. ·W. COMPTON, O.D.
.

OPTOMWIST

OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 ~CLOSE
:AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST

J,._

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'•t•._,

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JUST FOR BEING NICE, Frances Scholl, owner and opera !or of Court Street Grill was
presented an orchid and a cake by members of Carpenter Local 650 Presenting Mrs. Scholl
w1th the orchid is Pomeroy Mayor William Baroruck. Seated at the U.ble are members of Local
650, Antle Brickey, Vernon Hysell, Bob Rathburn, Gene Clark, D1ck Hayman, Terry Proffitt,
Jun Hobstetter, Don Earl Guinther, Mac VanMeter and Bill Bryant. Mrs . Scholl, who was
pleasantly surprised with the presentatiOn, observed, "No one has ever been so nice, I'm not
used to being surprised in such a mce way."

I--------------------------~I
Lellers of opinion are welcomed. They should be less I
I than 300 words long {or be sub)ecllo reduction by Ihe edilor) I

I

1 Wld musl be slgaed wllh the sognee's address. Names may be I
1 withheld upon pubhcatlon, ho11ever, on request. Letters I

I
lI

1 should be in good taste, addressing Issues. ool personRIItles.
I
0
I

lI
I

..d.eattd1/h
•• • %L~
:
"Vl·

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1

Asks help with Prayers
Dear Chr1st1ans :
I have good news to tell you. My nephew has been dtscharged
from the Harmarville Rehabihtatwn Center for a while. He IS
able to dnve his own car wtth hand controls. I pray and ask Our
Lord that he will touch Roland 's body and give him feelmg m his
body and I pray and ask, Dear Lord, that he wlll walk by hunself
unmediately . Iask th1s all m Jesus precious name. Amen. Thank
God. Thank you for all your prayers
Please pray w1th me for:
A free country My first husband was m World War 11. My
oldest son was in the Vietnam War. God bless America, I pray
and ask
I pray and !ask that Commurusm be stamped out. 1pray and
ask that the dnug pushers be brought to the1r knees . 1 pray and
ask, Dear Lord1 t~.at you will burden their hearts and they will
turn to our Lord and be baptized.! pray and ask, Dear Lord, for
all lost souls hooked on drugs, tobacco and alcohol that you tay a
burden on their hearts and they w1ll turn to our dear Lord in
Jesus' precwus name. I pray and I ask that we have mmistry on
TV all day Sunday and also on radio stations. I pray and ask for
sacred mus1c on radio and TV all day &amp;!nday from now on.
I !JI'ay and ask, Dear Lord, that others be healed who are
paralyzed
Prayfully, Betty Lou Kern, Route I, Shade, Oh10

Hy United Press lnlematlonal
Today ts Monday, Sept. 25,
the 269th day of 1972 w1th 97 to
fo llow
The moon IS approaching 1!s
last quarter
The mormng stars are Venus,
Mars and Saturn.
The evemng stars are Mercury and Jup1ter.
Those born on this date are
under the stgn of L1bra.
American author Wilham C.
Faulkner was born Sept 25,
1897.
On this day in history :
In 1513, Spamsh e&lt;plorer
Vasco Nunez de Balboa became
the flrst known European to see
the Pactflc Ocean when he
crossed the Isthmus of Panama .
In 1789, the hrst Congress of
the Umted States adopted 12
amendments to the origmal
Constttut10n, 10 of whtch were
rat1fted and became known as
"the Blil of R1ghts."
In 1926, the Ford Motor
Company put Jts workers on an
eight-hour day, five-day-week
schedule for the first time.

If

'•

,.
J'

By the Popular Success of Our Noon
Buffet .
.,

'

AN EVENING
BUFFET

'• '

TUESDAY EVENING ONLY
5 to 9 3{)---$2 SO all you can eat, (or AI a Cartel

Today's Almanac

Hocking Tech Offering
Part-Time Day Courses
NELSONVILLE - Hocktng
Techmcal College ts offering,
along with its full-11mc day
program, a part-time day
program m all technologies
These part-tune day school
off enngs are designed for
those workmg second or third
sh1ft or for those whose home
dutJes allow them hm1ted
fre edom. These courses can
apply towards either an
assoctate degree, a technical
certtflcate, or be used as brushup or specaal tnterest courses.
Parttai hshng for part-time
day :
General Stud1es - Com·
mumcat10ns, Shde Rule, Math,
Pohtical Science, Psychology,
Speech, Techmcal Wroting
Public Service
In troductiOn to CorrectiOns,
Probahon &amp; Parole, Group
Interaction.
Engmeerong - Engoneerong
Draw1ng, IntroductiOn to
Electroc1ty.
Environmental Health
FJeld Biology, Commumty
Hea lth Adm1mstrat1on, Environmental Health I, Pubhc
Health
Law,
Basic
Photography
Business - Accounting,
Bustness &amp; Accountmg
Machmes, Business Machme
Duphcatmg, Computer Con·
cepts, Survey of Data, IntroductiOn lo Data, Reta1hng I,
Sales I, Shorthand I, Shorthand
Dictation and Transcr1pt10n,
Typmg I, Typing and Busmess
Machmes.
QuestiOns concermng these
courses should be dtrectcd to
R1chard Mitchell, Admissions
Officer, Ho cking Technical
College, Route I , Nelsonville,
Ohio 45764, or Telephone 7533514.

elsewhere. Hts work ts tn·
eluded tn many private
collectiOns He 1s skilled m
sculpture, des1gn, drawmg and
patnting. H1s awards mclude a
DaVmc1 Medal from I S.D.A
Cultural Hentage FoundatiOn,
and the Pope Paul VI B1shops
Medal for "Outstanding
contribution 111 the field of
Ltturg1cal Art."
Scrvmg w1th h1m on the Jury
are Cynth1a Bnngle, produc.
twn potter of Penland, N C.,
and Catherine Mtlovtch,
professor of Art and Des1gn at
Southern lihnots Umversity at
Edwardsville
The Martella College Crafts
Reg10nal w11l feature work of
artists,
craftsme n and
des1gners res1dtng m Oh10,

''

In 1970, the Umted States
warned the Soviet Umon
against butldmg a submanne
base m Cuba.

.'

.'
·'

A thought for the day
American author Wtlham
Faulkner satd, "I decline to
accept the end of man .

,.'

Refused Presidency
Albert Emstein was of.
fered the pres1dency of the
State of Israel when Pres!·
dent Chaim We!Zmann died
m 1952, but declmed th1s
honor, insisting that he was
not fitted for such a pos1!1on.

StJIRT
FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVItE
1:1 At 9-0ut At 5

Use Our Free Parkmg Lot

Robinson!s Cleaners
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

W1de M enu
Cho1ce

•:
·~

Drinks and
Dessert Extra.

·'

Order our regular menu every nigh t 5 to 10.

Have You Heard?

·,

HAPPY HOUR

·'
,'

,,

MON.-FRI. 4 TO 6 PM
PRETZELS &amp; PEANUTS ON BAR.
You'll bQ happy when you come here.

The MEIGS INN
PH. 992·3629

POMERdY.
''

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"'_,

J)~ss:A~PQU~is

a·happiness dUng.

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Enter our Dress-A-Doll Contest.

''

Financial Policy Questioned

,.

•,

En!

''Why?"

"Because I'm a damn good quarterback and I don 't think
Roger can beat me out right now. I've read you guy's columns.
You say I'm a lousy quarterback, and for awhile there I thought I
was bad. But I hadda be a little stronger with myself. I feel now
1t's fortWJate that Roger and I are w1th the Cowboys, I think
either of us can lead the team to the &amp;!per Bowl. The game out
there today' I don't think I did anything poorly. Maybe not
everything perfectly, but nothing poorly."
Morton later went Into the shower room 1111d wben he returned
somebody told him Landry hadn't actually been crillcal of him
· and It would be wrong for Morton to think that.
"Tom Landry'" Morton said. "I love him. I admire him
greatly."
It was obvious he meant it.
But Toni Fritsch, the chunky soccer.. tyle field goal kicker who
sUll gets a bit of old VleMa mtohis conversation, put a capon the
whole business .
"I know only wn zing sure," '&gt;e said In that delightful accent of
his. "1bree points for field goal."

.

;. ;..,." ;. ,
'' '"'~'. IM ;

MARIETTA - Virgil Cantim, professor and cha11'11l3n of
studio arts and art education at
the Univers~ty of Pittsburgh,
will be one of three jurors at
the Mar1etta College Crafts
Regwnal scheduled Nov. D-30
at Grover M. Hermann Fine
Arts Center.
Can tim holds a B.F.A. from
Carnegie
Institute
of
Technology and an M.A. from
the Univers1ty of Pittsburgh.
His work has been shown m
many exhibitions including the
anrrual exhibition of Associated
ArtiSts of P1ttsburgh (s1nce
1945) and the World's Fair at
Brussels in 1958
,
Hts sculpture, murals and
enamels appear tn many public
bUildings in Pennsylvania and

TO THE PEOPLE OF MEIGS COUNTY:
It has come to our attent10n that the employees of the
deparlments of the Me1gs County government have not had a pay
ra1se 10 ( 3) three year&lt; and that several of the employees of one
of the County Agencies have not been paid for several pay
periods. WHY ? The same procedure IS bemg done in 87 other
counties .
One may be led to th1nk th1s inJustice lies 10 the hands of the
commissioners, not so. The problem is with the Budget ComffilSSlOll which consist of the Treasurer, Auditor, and Prosecuting
Attorney.
Alaska's Flag
It seems that when these gentlemen need money for the1r
On Alaska's state flag , the
seven gold stars, represent· assistance it 1S available . We now have (4) four assistant
ARGUMENT IN
OPPOSITION TO
ing the state's gold-mimng m- Auditors, (2) assistant treasurers and (I) one assistant to the
PROPOSED AMENDMENT dustry, form the B1g Dipper. Prosecuting Attorney.
Vote NO on tuue ;r
Approvmg Issue 2 Will hurt An eighth star, in the corner,
Do we need these ass1stants'
YOU
is the North Star, symboJiz.
How many legal matters come !o the Prosecuting Attorney's
ing the state's locatwn m the
ISSUE 2 WILL DESTROY THE far
ofhce
10 a year?
north
HOMESTEAD EXEMPTION
How many checks does the auditor himself write per month'
AND 10 PCT PROPERTY TAX
RED UCTION
How many transactions does our treasurer do m a month'
Loss of the real estate ta )C
Mary's Mother
Please , can someone tell us?
reductions th e corpora t e and
Saint Anne 1s traditionally
personal Income taxes made
What
the employees of Meigs County should do Is form a
poss1ble
would
cost regarded as the w1fe of
hom&amp;owners who are over 6&lt;t, Joachim and the mother of union, and ask for a pay increase to compensate for the cost of
yearly tax sa v ings amoun t ing to
as much as 80 pet of the1r the Virgin Mary. Her life is living, to be sure that people do not go unpaid and for better
property taxes and would take found only in the apocryphal working conditions for all.
away all other taxpayers ' 10 books of the New Testament.
lt is high time for the people of Meigs County to wake-up and
pet real estate ta x rollback.
question such actions.
ISS UE 2 WILL CAUSE OTHER
One other question weforgot to ask, where is the $400,000 that
NEW AND INCREASED
TAXES FOR INDIVIDUALS . Joan of Arc was 17 years is in the county's general fund?
Supporters of I ssue 2 don ' t old when she defeated the
ln closing we would like to bring the Budget Commission to
want reduced spendrno . Tl'1ey army of
Ian d's King
want to shift the burden of Henry VI an won a crown
reality, it is not long before you ( 3) three, are to be re-elected
taxat1on from the wealthy to the
average taxpayer by a flat for France's Charles VII.
(MAYBE).
1ncome ta)l wh1ch would
Thanks to the editor for publishing this letter.
DOUBLE ta xes for families
earning $9 ,000 or less and would
Signed, People for a Democratic County
reduce taxes ONLY for families ta )Ces be based on abiltiY to, pay .
(Name withheld on request)
earnlno over S18 ,SOO
DON'T BE MISLED INTO
ISSUE 2 WILL CAUSE PAYING MORE THAN YOUR Believes Tax
Unfair
Middleport, Ohio
HIGHER TAXES FOR THE FAIR SHARE FOR GOOD
GOVERNME
NT
SMALL BUSINESSMAN
Sept. 20, t972
Vote no on usue 2
Hlgh .prof l t
corporatio ns
Dear
Sir:
Committee
against
the
would save about SlSO mlll10n If
Amendment William w Tan,
Issue 2 passes. A flat rate tn
Would you please Print this in your paper. As Ive have Read
come ta)C tor all businesses, James J . Flannery, Oliver
this
statement on the Premisslve act Ucense Tax of addition
Inc luding partnerships and Ocas!k., E . W Lampson
proprletotshlps, would force all
$5.00. on Each set of Ucense that are Sold In side of the CorUNITED STATES
businesses to pay the same rate
poration. it also States that it would be used for Street Repair
OF AMERICA
STATE DF OHIO
ISSUE 2 WILL R.EDUCE
onely.
OFFICE OF THE
STATE SUPPORT TO YOUR
SECRETARY
OF
STATE
in theSentlniiDated August 27,1972 the Mayor of our VIllage,
COMMUNITY
I, TED W. BROWN, stated that this was a fair tax. I do not agree with that statement.
Oon 'l vote for a pig -In a poke .

296 W. Second. Pomeroy, 0.

r

Jurors for Crafts Regional

vf the Proposed

ARTICLE XII, Sect1on 8

(2nd game I
New York 401001 002- 8 12 0
HRS Agee Cleveland 100 011 ooo- 3 7 1
{6th)
Gardner, Lyle {9) and Ellis .

gulllen LP Moose (12 9)

4' '· ·

ConST•Iutlon.al Amendment

Carlton (25 10) and Bateman.
Seaver , McGraw (9) and Dyer

Bucknell 44 Dre)C el 0

Connecftcuf 7 Vermont 0
Cornell 34 Belo11 0
Fordham 22 Sf Peter 's 7
Hoi y Cross 30 Brown 24
Ma ssac hu setts 37 Ma• n 0

Propo1ed by
tn•tlahve Pelttion

~

Marietta College Department
of Art, and is supported by the
Fenton Art Glass Company of
Wllhamstown, W Va. Prizes
toU.l $3,:i00 including a special
Best Des1gn for Industry
Award of $500, to be presented
by the Fenlon Art Glass
Company.
Kentucky, Tennessee , North ·
Carolina, West V1rgima and
Further mformation about
Pennsylvma Works ehgtble MCCR may be obtained by
are glass, enamels, ceramics, writing to Manetta College
textiles, Jewelry, wood and Crafts Regional, Manetta
meta l
College, Mar1etta, Ohio 45750.
The show 1s sponsored by the

Prof. Cantini on Panel of

AMENDMENT TO
THE CONSTITUTION

Linescores

Easl
Boston College 49 Templ e 27 LPAker (66)
Colgate 33 Lafayette 14

Callforn 1a 2 Mmnesota 1
Salurday•s Resulls
New York 5 Cleveland 2 (6 1/ 2
1nmngs, ram)
Defrott 7 Boston 1
Mmnesota 2 Caltforn•a 1
Milwaukee 2 Balf!more 1
Oakland 2 Kansas City 1
Ch•cago 4 Te)Cas 3
Today's Probable Pitchers

LEGAL NOTICE

Hubal caJdweU to Jimmy C.
Caldwell, Sally A. Caldwell, 2
acre, Orange.
'
Milo Hutchmson, Betty A.
Hutch1son to Ohio Power Co.,
easement, Rutland.
Charles Wise, Geneva Wise
to Clarence A. Lawson, \! acre
{Galha) Meigs-Gallia.
Gloria J. Dalley, James L.
Gordon Collins, Celia Collins Dailey to Wtlson C. Hunt,
to Intra State Pipeline Co., Peggy Hunt, 6 acres, ColumInc , R1ght of Way, Olive.
bia
Betty A. Hutchison to Milo B.
Hutchison, parcels, Rutland.
Barnum's Beginning
Herbert Williams, Floss1e' D.
P. T Barnum, the world's
Stanley, Robert Stanley to most famous showman, be·
Manning D Webster, 76 acres, gan his career in 1835, with
the purchase and exhibltlon
Bedford
of
Joyce Heth, a Negro worn·
Mannong D. Webster, Mary
an
we1ghing only 46 pounds,
A. Webster to Herbert alleged
to have been George
Williams, Flossoe D. Stanley, Washmgton's nurse and re·
76 acres, Bedford.
ported to be over 160 years
Dana L. Channell to Byron old.
Bailey, parcels, Bedford.
Jesse Frazter, Elva Lee
Where tides come twice a
Frazier to Danny Kiser, day, the interval between
parcels, Salem
high and low water is a little
Howard B. Caldwell Sr., more than six hours.

Meigs
Property
Transfers

is

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the

must elthtr be replaced by a

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If the Income tax Is repealed, It

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NO 918·1OOSER IES-"CLASSIC"

'
FOR BIG. DI~COUNT SAVINGS I

700 W. Main • Pomeroy
9 to 9 Dally-Sunday 1·9

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The cl ~li!IC lmes of modern are ve•y much m ev1denre
In thiSillriCIIVC @IOUp lkau tl fUII)' finnhed 011 pccky

REGULAR 366.95

·'

pecan ve neers 1nd hardwDud solids, ftaiU/1111 Mu:ar t~

plashc tops and cust om designed ha•dw1ue

Bed. Chest, Dresser, Mirrors

--------------------------------·
INGELS FURNITURE

PH. 992-2635

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MIDDLEPORT

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FLAT -RATE INCOME TAX ;
INCREASES
IN
REAL
ESTATE TAXES, CITY IN ·
COME TAXES. SALES TAXES,

TUITIONS. ETC ; or current
state aid must decrease for ·

Sec retary of State of I he Sta te of
Ohio. do hereby cer tify that the
foregoing Is a true copy of the
te"t of a proposed constitutional
amendment
Initiated
by
petttlon ,
together
wtth
arguments for Its actopt•on and
arguments against Its adopl1on ,
flied In the Office of the
Secretary
of
State
and
proposing to amend the abov~
Section of the Constitution ot

CITIES , COUNTIES, AND
TOWNSHIPS , . SCHOOLS AND UNIVER ·
SITIES;
Ohio.
MENTAL HEALTH ;
HOSPITALS
PUBLIC
IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF ,
ASSISTANCE;
CLEAN AIR AND WATER t have hereunto subscribed by
namt and affixed my official
ISSUE 2 WILL ELIMINATE' seal at Columbul the twenty .
FAIRNESS AND JUSTICE IN fourth day of September, 1972 .
OHIO'S TAX SYSTEM .
TEOW . BROWN
IIIUt 2 p1rm1t1 only I flit ·
Stcrttarv of State
rot• Income tu, llkt lhe cltv
Income t1x : It eliminates the
principle that Ohio voters

ISea II

odoptod In 1912. that Income (9) 25, (101 2. 9, 16, 23, Stc

if the CoWJty would pass this tax, then we could Call this a fair
tax. We Believe in being Honest and We are ta&lt;ed now so much
that we Cannot Vote for a tax for our Schools, our City officials
did Not Have enough. Courtesy or Respect for lhe people of our
Village to Have this tax put on the Ballot for the people to vote on.
If our officials think they can just set aroWJd the table and tell
people of our VIllage just what they have to do then Dl ask this
question. do we Uve Wider Dlcatorshlp. if not Lets all try to treat
Everyy one Equal unUll thla tax goes on couty or State wide Its an
Wlfalr tax I figure my $10.00 is worth as much inside the VIllage
as the other m1n with $10.00 out side the Corporation for Ht uses
our Streets much more than any one in slde the Corporation.
Sincerely yours
Verner H. See
344GrantSt.
Middleport, Ohio

.-

Wt' JW!'d your help Io llrln fl hJppines&gt;

m•t•rly t hilclrpn this Chmtmas. Come
Jtl tlow - ,upply ol doll s i' llllll lecl - and
pit k up" irt•e doll. Des1gn and &gt;ew an
I&gt;Ltltit tor il. !hen return 1t to us It will
IJp dt,piJyecl 111 our lobby w11h J ll lhe
f)rpss-A -Doll dolk Pr1z es will lw

lo

· I ~ .. O IM A· ~

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' I

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{S) Co, , ~' ' ll hl 19 n by R cho•d Shtbb&lt;M wo d "'"""'" ' " ' IAt

The Farmers Bank &amp;· Savings Co.
POMElK)Y, OHIO
Member of Federal Reserve Svstem
On Fridays Our Drive-In Window is Open 91. m. lo 7 p, m. tConlinuoualy),

S20,0QO lto\uimum Insurance For Each Depositor

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awJrded. Don 't worry aboul st•wing
skill s. You r doll will find i1 home tn tht•
,1 rm' ol ,1 child on Chrostmas rl,1y , ,1ml
belo ved
You lllil ke Dre"·A-Doll* J , 1Jpp111ess
tlu ng Tlhtnk yuu

,• ''

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�u-l'he Daily Sentinel, Middleport.Pomerov. 0 .. Seot. 25,1972

Election Year to Flavor ~t: s:o·c,·~·a ·,-1·
Selection of Book Reviews t: ; CaIen da r1ij*

NUl"S NINTERS

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:&amp;
•·.~,'

Green Thumb
Notes

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Mrs. Forrest Bachtel is the
1972·73 president of the Middleport Li terary Club which
wi ll begin its season of book
rev iews in October wi th
se lections apropos to the
Election Year .
A member of the club for
almost 20 years, th is year
marks Mrs. Bachiel's second
term as president. She first
served in 1957-58.
The first meeting of the club
to be held on Oct. 11 will be
hosted by Miss Lucille Smith
with Mrs. James Titus to
review "Nixon in tl\e White
House" by Evans Novak . Roll
call wi ll be a comment on the
book .
Scheduled for review at the
second meeting by Miss Smith
is "The Election Game, " with
members to relate for recall
events of an election they
remember for roll calL Hostess
for· that meeting to be held on
Oct. 25 wi ll be Mrs. James
Euler.
The Nov . 1 meeting wi ll be
held at7:30 p.m . at the home of
Mrs . Harold Sauer. Scheduled
for review at the meeting are
"The Word" by Irving Wallace
by Mrs. Carl Horky, an d
Wil liam Sa raya n' s book,
"Places Wh ere I've Done
Time" by Mr5. Ben Philson .
Places visited is the roll call
response for U1at meeting . The
Nov. 15 meeting will feature
th e book " The Peaceable
Kin gdom' ' by Jan de Hartog
reviewed by Mrs. Richard

1). weekly feature of Meigs
County Carden Club members.

·Things to Do in September

MONDAY
EV ANGEUSTIC .services
being held at Asbury · United
Methodist Church, Syracuse,
through Oct. I, 7:30p.m. nightly. The Rev. Wendell Stuttler
guest speaker. Special music
each evening.
IZAAK WALTON League
Monday, 7 p.m.

BY MRs. EDWARD SIMPSON
'Bend O' lhe River Garden Club
September is a delightful month. Now is the time to think of
iheplants you want to keep for next spring.
·Glads should be saved. Dig up corms after the leaves of the
plantbave turned yellow. Store the corms in a box with plenty of
dry peat moss, and add handful of moth crystals. This destroys
• the pest known as thrip.
Dahlias need to be dug. Wait until at least one week after
frost has blackened them. After lifting the tubes from the ground,
cut off the stems and then store in a cool, frost free room.
· Geraniums can be reused year after year. Lift the plants
..before the slightest touch of frost. These need to be stored with
· 'sOli around the roots. Dig straight down in a circle all around the
::: plail!, then lift up, keeping as much soil around the roots as
&lt; ··posSible. Pack the plants closely together in a strong cardboard
·'. ·,box; then throw a little more soil over them. Be sure to keep them
•: ··~iaiu!.ing' upright . Store in cool, frost free room. Give them an
~ \x!casionallig'ht spray of water, never wet the soil. In April strip
·.ol£ ctead leaves, shake off old soil and as soon as the weather is
·.·. vo:aiin, plant out of doors.
· ·: ' .'Other things to do are to clean up the entire garden, the
' bOrder and the specimen beds. Gather up every bit of trash and
get rid ofit. Don't leave any nesting place for bugs or mice.
Raise your lawn mower setting. Keep mowing until the grass
stops growing.
Be sure to water all woody plants, shrubs and trees. More
small trees and shrubs die from drought during winter than ever
freeze to death.
Plant a row of beets and one of carrots. Both will be up first
thing next spring, and you will be eating from your garden even
before your neighbors finish planting their seeds.
Southerners who live in frost free areas and would like to
plant the same bull:6 that grow in cooler climate can buy bulbs Owen .
now and store them in a cool place. Just after Thanksgiving plant
" Dorothy and Red" by
them and have late winter blooms.
Vince nt Sheen; "Main Street"

DIRECTORS meeting,
Pomeroy-Middleport Lions
Club, 7 p.m. Monday at the
Columbia Gas Co. of Ohio
Office.
TUESDAY
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary , Drew Webster Post
39, Tuesday, 7:30 at the hall.
Mrs. Catherine Welch, music
chairman to have charge of
program.

MRS. BACIITEL
by Sinclair Lewis: "Nicholas
and Alexandra " by Robert K.
Massie ; "Bury My Hearl at
Wounded Knee" by Dee Bown;
"Fatal Friendship" by Stanley
Loomis: "In My Father 's
House" by Gay Telese; "Nader
- The People's Lawyer" by
Robert Buckhorn , and Jesse

Vicki Ann Lingerfelt Is
Bride Of Gary P. N0 rth up
Miss Vicki Ann Lingerfelt
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
· Charles Lingerfelt of 2901
Meadowbrook Drive and Gary
Patric.k Northup, son of Mr.
. and ·Mrs. Deryl Northup of
· Clifton were united in
· inarria.ge July 14.
·. ; .. The ·Rev , Norville White
· officiated at the double ring
· ceremony which was held at
7:30 p:m. in St. Paul's United
Methodist Church in Point
· Pleasant.
·Nup\ial music was provided
· by .' Mrs . Betty Craddock,
o;gartil!t.
. Given in marriage by her
father; the bride wore a full
. length gown of imported silk
and lace with long fitted
sleeves pointed at the wrist.
The bodice was fitted with a
·square scalloped neckline
outlined with sequins and seed
pearls. The empire waist was
accented with white satin,
with the skirt being A·line and
fully gathered in the back.
The hemline was scalloped.
She carried a white bible,
topped with white carnations
and long streamers.
Her fingertip veil was of
nylon tulle fastened to a
headpiece of lace with sequins
and seed pearls.Miss Debbie
McDaniel was maid of honor
and wore a floor length pink
gown of voile and lace with a
full gathered skirt and
rna !c hin~ wide brimmed hat.
Her fl owers were pink
with
long
carnations
streamers.
Miss
Penni
Sibley,
bridesmaid, wore a floor
length gown styled identically
to the maid of honor's. Her
flowers were blue carnations
with long streamers.
Serving the bridegoom as
best man
was
Alan
Underwood. UShers were
Duane Johnson, nephew of the
bridegroom, and David
Linge rfelt, brother of the
bride.
The mother of the bride
wore a street length dress of
pale pink polyester with white
accessories. Her corsage was
white carnations.
The mother of the

The committees are Mrs.
Bachtel, Mrs. Owen, and Mrs.
Jones, program; Mrs. Charles
Gaskill, Mrs. Rodney Downing,
and Mrs. Bernard Fultz,
music; Mrs . M. L. French,
Mrs. Robert Fisher, Mrs.
Horky, and Mrs. Thereon
Johnson, civic; Mrs. Euler,
Stuar t's &lt;!Remembered Dawn" Mrs. Nan Moore and Mrs. 0. B.
are among other ·books to be Stout, library ; and Mr s. Arthur
reviewed at the meetings Strauss, Mrs. Dwight Wallace,
which are held on alternate Mrs. Ben Philson, and Mrs.
Wednesdays, 2 p.m., October to Roy Casse ll , heal th and
May .
hou seho ld economics comThe program book for the mittee .
year has been dedicated to the
Other active members of the
late Miss Bess Sanborn who club are Mrs . Roy Cassell,
served as president of the Club Mr s . James Harley , Mrs .
in 1926-27.
Everett Haye s, Mrs . John
Besides Mrs. Bachtel, other Welsh, and Mrs. Dwight
officers are Mrs. Emerson 7..avitz. Associate members are
Jones, vice presiden t; Mrs. Mrs . M. R Chambers. Mrs. G.
Dwigh t Wallace , secre tary, H. Lasher, Mrs. C. M. Hen·
and Mrs. Marion French, nesy, Mrs . R. M. Sherman, and
treasurer.
Mrs . Waiter Waddell .

Club Plans Party

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A Halloween party at the so ld in November and
Meigs Coun ty Children 's Home December.
was planned as a community
Janice Herman presided at
service project Thursday night the meeting which opened with
by the Middleport Goiddiggers the flag pledge and the 4-H
4-H Club at the home of Mrs. motto. Minutes were read by
Mai-ion Francis, advisor .
Li sa Scaggs, secretary .
Keith Black, cha irman, Recreation consisted of games
named Lisa Scaggs , Debbie and singing with Keith Black
Taylor, Toni Page and Janice serving the refreshments . The
Herman to work with him on Sept. 28 meeting will be held at
the party . Good used clothing is the park with refreshments to
still being collected by the 4·H be prov ided by Lydia Johnson
club members for children at and Toni Pope .
the county home an d residents
wi th items to con tribute are
asked to contact Mrs . Francis
al 992-5884 or any member of
the club .
Arrangements for another
cookout were made. II will be
held on the th ird Thursday of
Mr. aod Mrs. P. L. Mitch
October at th e Midd lepor t
Commurity park. Toni Pope spent the past week in Marion
wa s welcomed as a new visiting Mr . and Mrs. William
r.1ember. A leaf hunt was Houck . While there they spent
plann ed for late October . a day at the Delaware Fair.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Roush and
Toothbrushes and key chains
are still being sold by the club. children of St. Albans, W. Va .
Nuts and scatter pins will be and Mr . and Mrs . Roger Rou sh
of Columbus were weekend
guests of Mr . and Mrs. Albert
Roush and family .
Mr. and Mrs. Harry S.
Moore, Jr . of Ashland, Ky.
spent the weekend here visiting
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jeffers, Mr. and Mrs. Harry S. Moore,
Lester, Marco, and Robert Sr.

RACINE AMERICAN
Legion Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday night at the hall .
Potluck refreshments.
MIDDLEPORT LODGE 363,
F. and A.M. annual father·son
banquet, 6:15p.m. Tuesday at
the Middleport Masonic
Temple.
POMEROY Past Matrons,
7:30 Tuesday, home of Mrs.
Trell Schoenleb. Devotions by
Mrs . Albert
Woodard ;
Program by Mrs. Nellie Tracy.
JUNIOR AMERICAN Legion
Auxiliary , Feeney-Bennett
Post 128,7 p.m. Tuesday at'the
hall.
WEDNESDAY
AMERICAN LEGION
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, Middleport hall, 7:30
p.m. potluck with meeting to
follow . Covered dish to be
taken by each member.
POMEROY - Middleport
Lions Club, noon luncheon at
Meigs Inn,
OHIO Valley Commandry 24,
Knight Templar , stated
meeting, 7:30p.m. Wednesday,
Pomeroy Masonic Temple .
Open in full form with mem.
hers to take sword and bell.
THURSDAY
RIVERVIEW Garden Club to
tour the garden of Mrs. Ada
Holter, Pomeroy Rd., Thurs.
day evening, Sept. 28 at 6:30.
Mrs. Holter will also demonstrate flower arranging to the
members. The members will
return to the Home of Mrs.
Gene Wilson for a business
meeting and refreshments.

Oldest Breed of Dog
The saluki is believed to be
the old est purebred dog in
the world. It was developed
in Syria and was brought to
Egypt by Arab traders about
7000 B.C .

REAlLY 1 I(JflAT

Doctor's Advice Needed
For Baby's Allergies ·

GO RIGHT
AHEAD AN'
LAFF AN'

By POLLY CRAMER
DEAR POLLY-I am answering Lois whose ll·month·
old baby is allergic to bleach or fabric softener used m
his laundry. I had the same problem when my seven·
year·old was that age but an army doctor told ~e 10 add
vinega r to the final rinse water for all the baby s clothes
and diapers Keep up that great column.-LELA
DEAR GIRLS-I think In all such cases one's own baby
doctor should be consulted before trying anything pertaining to allergies . Insufficient rinsing can cause a rash.
Always rinse at least tbree tlmes.- POLLY
)J"1Imml~~&gt;ilr::w:!lt";m0ui'i Polly's Problem l:lllil
·
~~ DEAR POLLY- The tenants who lived here before used some kind of adhesive, apparently a two·
inch tape, to fasten down the edge of a . rug across
the middle of the kitchen floor. Wh~t can I use. to
remove the remaining adhesive wrthout hlirmmg
the linoleum tiles under it?-NORMA

SNICKER,
ELV INEY·-

· CAMPUS

DEAR POLLY- I am a student who works as a waitr~ ss
during the vacation months and my Pet Peeve 1s wrth
the m.any people who come in the re st~urant dunn~ the
rush time and sit down at a drrty table mslead of walling
for a table or booth to be cleaned. This not only makes
the cleaning up situation unhandy for the waitress but
the customer runs the risk of having food or drmk
spilled on him . It really takes no longer when you walt
for a clean booth.-SANDRA

bridegroom wore a street
lengt h dre5s of peach
polyester
with
white
accessories and a corsage of ·
white carnations.
A reception was held in the
social room of the church. ,
Prior to the wedding a bridal

Pledge Approved

showel\)l'as given by Miss
Debie ~Da n iel and Miss
Fredda Painter. A bridal
shower was also given by Mrs.
Deryl Northup .
The newlyweds are now
residing on Sand Hill Road .

ATIEND RECEPTION
wa s his guest.
Mrs. Charl es Kessinger,
William Stout received
A pledge of $100 to the En· ber wh o is now hos- president of the American
serious
in juries in a. tractor.
terprise United Methodist pitalizcd . Mrs. Marjorie Legion Auxiliary , Eighth
Church treasury was made by Bowen presen ted the program District, Miss Becky Roush, truck acciden t and is confined
O'Bleness
Memorial
the Willin g Workers Class which opened with scripture by Junior Auxiliary Eighth to
during a meeting held Thurs- Mrs. Co rdelia Bentz , The District president, and Mrs, Hospital, Athens, where he is
day night at the home of Mrs. beatitudes were read by the Roger Roush spent Saturday in under observation and being
treated.
Agnes Weeks with Mrs. Ruby group, and several members Alliance where they attended a
Sgt. Helen Peck, Offutt Air
Frick as the hostess.
gave readings and scripures on reception honorin g Mrs.
Force
Base, Nebraska, spen t
To raise the money the class the lesson. Words of the hymn, Donald L. Miller, Ohio
some
time here wi th her
pbinned a yard sale to be held "More Like the Master" were American Legion Auxiliary
paren ts, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
president.
on Oct. 5-7, Church plates ate . read by Mrs. Nancy Smith.
Peck and other relatives.
being aold 11 another money· ' The wonder box was won by
Mr , and Mrs . Man ford
making project and can be Mrs . Smith . Refreshments
Smith, Carroll, visited with
purchued from any member were served to those named
U1eir oon and daughter·in-law,
of the cllu.
and Mr5 . Delores WiU, Mrs. Wilson , Mrs. Beatrice Buck,
Mr. and Mr5. Lewis Smith and
A round-r:.obln card was Mary Bowen, Mrs. Mabel Mrs. Beulah utterbach, Miss
family,
including the Larry
signed for Mrs. Jesse Grif- Moore, Mrs. Agnes Dixon, Mrs. Freda Leh·ing, Patty Ed\l'ards,
,Stanleys from F.rie, Pa ., who
fllh, a former
mem- Mildred Mitch, Mrs. Anna and Becky Will.
were guests here.

DEAR POLLY- My husband ruined the varnished
wood surface of our bed headboard. Everywhere his hand
or arm rested on the wood it turned white and the spots
were impossible to remove. After we bought new furm·
ture I worried about that
bed headboard . To protect
it I made a giant·size "pil·
lowcase" that slides over
it at night. Even old shee ts
can be used to make such
a covering. Leave openings
at. the top edge for any
knobs, posts, etc., to go
through. !lay ours over tlie
pillows before pulling up
the bedspread for the day·
time hours . This not only
protects the headboard from the touch of his skin but
from scratches that might be made by rmgs and harr
rollers.
I also want to tell those who sew that, when sewin g in
basting stitches for ea5ing in sleev.es in garments, use
a con trasting color thread so there rs no huntmg fo r the
right thread to pull up to gather the sleeve. - KATHY
DEAR POLLY- If your pet hates to be sprayed fo r
fleas, etc. , put the spray on a rag and rub it in the fur .
It works great-S. D.

AH 15 READY
TO SEE TI-l'
VOTER r=uM
DOGPATCH-

. W~INGTON

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-THE
or=r= tCE

NO!/- IT'S A BIG
CORPORATION
LAW'/ER, FROM

HEW 'fORK!!

·. ·. OF ·

EN AH DON'T HAFTA WEAR THIS
®11'!! HAT, OR TOTE n-\15-!f.'.'®~

SQUIRFU:L:GU"'!!- GtT THAT .JUG

OUTA HERE., AN' BRING BACK
MAH Ct-IAMI'AGNE. !! r----"

60 SPE-CIAL

OPPRE~D

IN FOLICE V.ORK, KA'ItiY.
NOT NAN'! COLLEGE
~DENTS ARE 1\-iE~
t:\O&gt;.YS.

ABOUT FRED,
w&gt;.D ...

MINORmE5 .

He/..l.0,6E:SS! I'D LIKE

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/"'7N_Ib_H_T_.__,t=-&gt;Jf

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. : .JACKs. · ·
PHOGBC&gt;LND

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WHO KNOW'?

BUT .5HE SEEMS
HAPPY A&amp; A
LARK.

(NEWSPAPER £NTUPR!SE ASSN.)

You will receive a doUar If Polly uses your favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet Peeve, PoUy's Problem or solution
to a problem. Write Polly In care of this new• paper,

Party Given For Pastor
Mr. Clifford Smith, ordained
at the Barberton Church of
Christ on Sept. 10, was honored
recently by the Bradford
Church of Christ with a dinner
party during which time a
pourd showe r was held for him
and his family and · a gift
certificate was presented to
him .
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Wise of
the Rutland Church presented
devotions and special music .
Present were Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Durst and Timmy, Mrs .
Madeline Painter , Diane,
Becky and Victor ; Mr. and
Mrs . Tip Wilt, Mrs. Jessie
White and Joy, Mr. and Mrs.

Jim Hazelton, Jane, Tim and
Cynthia, Mr . and Mrs. Homer
Forrest, Mrs. Frances Hysell ,
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Hysell,
Linda, Donald and Donna Kaf,
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gilkey
and Mark, Mr'. and Mrs. Ben
Rife, Carla and Becky. Mrs .
Nora Cambron, Mrs. Norma
Russell, Mrs. Eleanor Hoover
and Laura, Mrs. Lillian Bentz,
Mrs. Evelyn Wood, Keith ,
Bonnie, Rodney and Lori Jane,
Verna Hysell, Mrs . Alma
White, Brian Justice, Mr. and
Mrs. Keith Wise, Rod Kasley,
Diana Wise, Bob Bender, and
the honored family .

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Yetrlerday'o Cryptoqaole: THE BEST TIME TO STAR'!/'
THINKING ABOUT YOUR RETIREMENT IS BEFORE TH&amp;
BOSS DOES.-SOUBCE UNKNOWN
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by THOMAS JOSEPH

ARE ON TAP in the

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Skinny Mini.
Fits almost
anywhere.
(Only 2feet wide)

ACROSS
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5. Construct
11. C•nter
II. Toiled

Yellow
Pages

erate

If. A way out

DICK TRACY

of prison
15. "... who

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In bath Washer &amp; Dryer.
Helps nr&gt;iron clothes keep
lhetr promise.

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%8. Jewel

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lint screen.

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Where the wash is-kitchen,

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THE NUT PULLEP A
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FRIEND iS INTERESTED

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News, Event

Mrs. Gary Patrick Northup

1 1M GLAD '/OUR BOY

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have return ed from a vacation
trip to Was hington, D. C. and
Canada.
Mrs. Mendal Jordan accompanied her daughter, Mrs .
Kenn et h Crabtree, to Cin·
cinnati where they were guests
of Mr . and Mrs, Walter Jordan
for the day and viewed points
of interest there.
Lois Gaston, who is attending
Career Academy in Columbus,
vi,ited her pa rents, Mr . and
Mrs. Paul Gaston, over the
weekend .
Hollis Throckmor ton, Milton,
W. Va . who lived in th is area as
a child, catted on Murl
Calaway and others in the
communi ty, recently.
Ron Burke celebrated his
birthday an d Billy Holcomb

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--BUT SHE'S GI VIN' TWICET AS'
MUCH MI LK SI NCE I GOT HER
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ModellCT·2
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BAKER FURNITURE

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-He1·e's how to work it :
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lo LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A .Is .
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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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Dear Whom,

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�u-l'he Daily Sentinel, Middleport.Pomerov. 0 .. Seot. 25,1972

Election Year to Flavor ~t: s:o·c,·~·a ·,-1·
Selection of Book Reviews t: ; CaIen da r1ij*

NUl"S NINTERS

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Green Thumb
Notes

•• •

•

Mrs. Forrest Bachtel is the
1972·73 president of the Middleport Li terary Club which
wi ll begin its season of book
rev iews in October wi th
se lections apropos to the
Election Year .
A member of the club for
almost 20 years, th is year
marks Mrs. Bachiel's second
term as president. She first
served in 1957-58.
The first meeting of the club
to be held on Oct. 11 will be
hosted by Miss Lucille Smith
with Mrs. James Titus to
review "Nixon in tl\e White
House" by Evans Novak . Roll
call wi ll be a comment on the
book .
Scheduled for review at the
second meeting by Miss Smith
is "The Election Game, " with
members to relate for recall
events of an election they
remember for roll calL Hostess
for· that meeting to be held on
Oct. 25 wi ll be Mrs. James
Euler.
The Nov . 1 meeting wi ll be
held at7:30 p.m . at the home of
Mrs . Harold Sauer. Scheduled
for review at the meeting are
"The Word" by Irving Wallace
by Mrs. Carl Horky, an d
Wil liam Sa raya n' s book,
"Places Wh ere I've Done
Time" by Mr5. Ben Philson .
Places visited is the roll call
response for U1at meeting . The
Nov. 15 meeting will feature
th e book " The Peaceable
Kin gdom' ' by Jan de Hartog
reviewed by Mrs. Richard

1). weekly feature of Meigs
County Carden Club members.

·Things to Do in September

MONDAY
EV ANGEUSTIC .services
being held at Asbury · United
Methodist Church, Syracuse,
through Oct. I, 7:30p.m. nightly. The Rev. Wendell Stuttler
guest speaker. Special music
each evening.
IZAAK WALTON League
Monday, 7 p.m.

BY MRs. EDWARD SIMPSON
'Bend O' lhe River Garden Club
September is a delightful month. Now is the time to think of
iheplants you want to keep for next spring.
·Glads should be saved. Dig up corms after the leaves of the
plantbave turned yellow. Store the corms in a box with plenty of
dry peat moss, and add handful of moth crystals. This destroys
• the pest known as thrip.
Dahlias need to be dug. Wait until at least one week after
frost has blackened them. After lifting the tubes from the ground,
cut off the stems and then store in a cool, frost free room.
· Geraniums can be reused year after year. Lift the plants
..before the slightest touch of frost. These need to be stored with
· 'sOli around the roots. Dig straight down in a circle all around the
::: plail!, then lift up, keeping as much soil around the roots as
&lt; ··posSible. Pack the plants closely together in a strong cardboard
·'. ·,box; then throw a little more soil over them. Be sure to keep them
•: ··~iaiu!.ing' upright . Store in cool, frost free room. Give them an
~ \x!casionallig'ht spray of water, never wet the soil. In April strip
·.ol£ ctead leaves, shake off old soil and as soon as the weather is
·.·. vo:aiin, plant out of doors.
· ·: ' .'Other things to do are to clean up the entire garden, the
' bOrder and the specimen beds. Gather up every bit of trash and
get rid ofit. Don't leave any nesting place for bugs or mice.
Raise your lawn mower setting. Keep mowing until the grass
stops growing.
Be sure to water all woody plants, shrubs and trees. More
small trees and shrubs die from drought during winter than ever
freeze to death.
Plant a row of beets and one of carrots. Both will be up first
thing next spring, and you will be eating from your garden even
before your neighbors finish planting their seeds.
Southerners who live in frost free areas and would like to
plant the same bull:6 that grow in cooler climate can buy bulbs Owen .
now and store them in a cool place. Just after Thanksgiving plant
" Dorothy and Red" by
them and have late winter blooms.
Vince nt Sheen; "Main Street"

DIRECTORS meeting,
Pomeroy-Middleport Lions
Club, 7 p.m. Monday at the
Columbia Gas Co. of Ohio
Office.
TUESDAY
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary , Drew Webster Post
39, Tuesday, 7:30 at the hall.
Mrs. Catherine Welch, music
chairman to have charge of
program.

MRS. BACIITEL
by Sinclair Lewis: "Nicholas
and Alexandra " by Robert K.
Massie ; "Bury My Hearl at
Wounded Knee" by Dee Bown;
"Fatal Friendship" by Stanley
Loomis: "In My Father 's
House" by Gay Telese; "Nader
- The People's Lawyer" by
Robert Buckhorn , and Jesse

Vicki Ann Lingerfelt Is
Bride Of Gary P. N0 rth up
Miss Vicki Ann Lingerfelt
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
· Charles Lingerfelt of 2901
Meadowbrook Drive and Gary
Patric.k Northup, son of Mr.
. and ·Mrs. Deryl Northup of
· Clifton were united in
· inarria.ge July 14.
·. ; .. The ·Rev , Norville White
· officiated at the double ring
· ceremony which was held at
7:30 p:m. in St. Paul's United
Methodist Church in Point
· Pleasant.
·Nup\ial music was provided
· by .' Mrs . Betty Craddock,
o;gartil!t.
. Given in marriage by her
father; the bride wore a full
. length gown of imported silk
and lace with long fitted
sleeves pointed at the wrist.
The bodice was fitted with a
·square scalloped neckline
outlined with sequins and seed
pearls. The empire waist was
accented with white satin,
with the skirt being A·line and
fully gathered in the back.
The hemline was scalloped.
She carried a white bible,
topped with white carnations
and long streamers.
Her fingertip veil was of
nylon tulle fastened to a
headpiece of lace with sequins
and seed pearls.Miss Debbie
McDaniel was maid of honor
and wore a floor length pink
gown of voile and lace with a
full gathered skirt and
rna !c hin~ wide brimmed hat.
Her fl owers were pink
with
long
carnations
streamers.
Miss
Penni
Sibley,
bridesmaid, wore a floor
length gown styled identically
to the maid of honor's. Her
flowers were blue carnations
with long streamers.
Serving the bridegoom as
best man
was
Alan
Underwood. UShers were
Duane Johnson, nephew of the
bridegroom, and David
Linge rfelt, brother of the
bride.
The mother of the bride
wore a street length dress of
pale pink polyester with white
accessories. Her corsage was
white carnations.
The mother of the

The committees are Mrs.
Bachtel, Mrs. Owen, and Mrs.
Jones, program; Mrs. Charles
Gaskill, Mrs. Rodney Downing,
and Mrs. Bernard Fultz,
music; Mrs . M. L. French,
Mrs. Robert Fisher, Mrs.
Horky, and Mrs. Thereon
Johnson, civic; Mrs. Euler,
Stuar t's &lt;!Remembered Dawn" Mrs. Nan Moore and Mrs. 0. B.
are among other ·books to be Stout, library ; and Mr s. Arthur
reviewed at the meetings Strauss, Mrs. Dwight Wallace,
which are held on alternate Mrs. Ben Philson, and Mrs.
Wednesdays, 2 p.m., October to Roy Casse ll , heal th and
May .
hou seho ld economics comThe program book for the mittee .
year has been dedicated to the
Other active members of the
late Miss Bess Sanborn who club are Mrs . Roy Cassell,
served as president of the Club Mr s . James Harley , Mrs .
in 1926-27.
Everett Haye s, Mrs . John
Besides Mrs. Bachtel, other Welsh, and Mrs. Dwight
officers are Mrs. Emerson 7..avitz. Associate members are
Jones, vice presiden t; Mrs. Mrs . M. R Chambers. Mrs. G.
Dwigh t Wallace , secre tary, H. Lasher, Mrs. C. M. Hen·
and Mrs. Marion French, nesy, Mrs . R. M. Sherman, and
treasurer.
Mrs . Waiter Waddell .

Club Plans Party

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A Halloween party at the so ld in November and
Meigs Coun ty Children 's Home December.
was planned as a community
Janice Herman presided at
service project Thursday night the meeting which opened with
by the Middleport Goiddiggers the flag pledge and the 4-H
4-H Club at the home of Mrs. motto. Minutes were read by
Mai-ion Francis, advisor .
Li sa Scaggs, secretary .
Keith Black, cha irman, Recreation consisted of games
named Lisa Scaggs , Debbie and singing with Keith Black
Taylor, Toni Page and Janice serving the refreshments . The
Herman to work with him on Sept. 28 meeting will be held at
the party . Good used clothing is the park with refreshments to
still being collected by the 4·H be prov ided by Lydia Johnson
club members for children at and Toni Pope .
the county home an d residents
wi th items to con tribute are
asked to contact Mrs . Francis
al 992-5884 or any member of
the club .
Arrangements for another
cookout were made. II will be
held on the th ird Thursday of
Mr. aod Mrs. P. L. Mitch
October at th e Midd lepor t
Commurity park. Toni Pope spent the past week in Marion
wa s welcomed as a new visiting Mr . and Mrs. William
r.1ember. A leaf hunt was Houck . While there they spent
plann ed for late October . a day at the Delaware Fair.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Roush and
Toothbrushes and key chains
are still being sold by the club. children of St. Albans, W. Va .
Nuts and scatter pins will be and Mr . and Mrs . Roger Rou sh
of Columbus were weekend
guests of Mr . and Mrs. Albert
Roush and family .
Mr. and Mrs. Harry S.
Moore, Jr . of Ashland, Ky.
spent the weekend here visiting
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jeffers, Mr. and Mrs. Harry S. Moore,
Lester, Marco, and Robert Sr.

RACINE AMERICAN
Legion Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday night at the hall .
Potluck refreshments.
MIDDLEPORT LODGE 363,
F. and A.M. annual father·son
banquet, 6:15p.m. Tuesday at
the Middleport Masonic
Temple.
POMEROY Past Matrons,
7:30 Tuesday, home of Mrs.
Trell Schoenleb. Devotions by
Mrs . Albert
Woodard ;
Program by Mrs. Nellie Tracy.
JUNIOR AMERICAN Legion
Auxiliary , Feeney-Bennett
Post 128,7 p.m. Tuesday at'the
hall.
WEDNESDAY
AMERICAN LEGION
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, Middleport hall, 7:30
p.m. potluck with meeting to
follow . Covered dish to be
taken by each member.
POMEROY - Middleport
Lions Club, noon luncheon at
Meigs Inn,
OHIO Valley Commandry 24,
Knight Templar , stated
meeting, 7:30p.m. Wednesday,
Pomeroy Masonic Temple .
Open in full form with mem.
hers to take sword and bell.
THURSDAY
RIVERVIEW Garden Club to
tour the garden of Mrs. Ada
Holter, Pomeroy Rd., Thurs.
day evening, Sept. 28 at 6:30.
Mrs. Holter will also demonstrate flower arranging to the
members. The members will
return to the Home of Mrs.
Gene Wilson for a business
meeting and refreshments.

Oldest Breed of Dog
The saluki is believed to be
the old est purebred dog in
the world. It was developed
in Syria and was brought to
Egypt by Arab traders about
7000 B.C .

REAlLY 1 I(JflAT

Doctor's Advice Needed
For Baby's Allergies ·

GO RIGHT
AHEAD AN'
LAFF AN'

By POLLY CRAMER
DEAR POLLY-I am answering Lois whose ll·month·
old baby is allergic to bleach or fabric softener used m
his laundry. I had the same problem when my seven·
year·old was that age but an army doctor told ~e 10 add
vinega r to the final rinse water for all the baby s clothes
and diapers Keep up that great column.-LELA
DEAR GIRLS-I think In all such cases one's own baby
doctor should be consulted before trying anything pertaining to allergies . Insufficient rinsing can cause a rash.
Always rinse at least tbree tlmes.- POLLY
)J"1Imml~~&gt;ilr::w:!lt";m0ui'i Polly's Problem l:lllil
·
~~ DEAR POLLY- The tenants who lived here before used some kind of adhesive, apparently a two·
inch tape, to fasten down the edge of a . rug across
the middle of the kitchen floor. Wh~t can I use. to
remove the remaining adhesive wrthout hlirmmg
the linoleum tiles under it?-NORMA

SNICKER,
ELV INEY·-

· CAMPUS

DEAR POLLY- I am a student who works as a waitr~ ss
during the vacation months and my Pet Peeve 1s wrth
the m.any people who come in the re st~urant dunn~ the
rush time and sit down at a drrty table mslead of walling
for a table or booth to be cleaned. This not only makes
the cleaning up situation unhandy for the waitress but
the customer runs the risk of having food or drmk
spilled on him . It really takes no longer when you walt
for a clean booth.-SANDRA

bridegroom wore a street
lengt h dre5s of peach
polyester
with
white
accessories and a corsage of ·
white carnations.
A reception was held in the
social room of the church. ,
Prior to the wedding a bridal

Pledge Approved

showel\)l'as given by Miss
Debie ~Da n iel and Miss
Fredda Painter. A bridal
shower was also given by Mrs.
Deryl Northup .
The newlyweds are now
residing on Sand Hill Road .

ATIEND RECEPTION
wa s his guest.
Mrs. Charl es Kessinger,
William Stout received
A pledge of $100 to the En· ber wh o is now hos- president of the American
serious
in juries in a. tractor.
terprise United Methodist pitalizcd . Mrs. Marjorie Legion Auxiliary , Eighth
Church treasury was made by Bowen presen ted the program District, Miss Becky Roush, truck acciden t and is confined
O'Bleness
Memorial
the Willin g Workers Class which opened with scripture by Junior Auxiliary Eighth to
during a meeting held Thurs- Mrs. Co rdelia Bentz , The District president, and Mrs, Hospital, Athens, where he is
day night at the home of Mrs. beatitudes were read by the Roger Roush spent Saturday in under observation and being
treated.
Agnes Weeks with Mrs. Ruby group, and several members Alliance where they attended a
Sgt. Helen Peck, Offutt Air
Frick as the hostess.
gave readings and scripures on reception honorin g Mrs.
Force
Base, Nebraska, spen t
To raise the money the class the lesson. Words of the hymn, Donald L. Miller, Ohio
some
time here wi th her
pbinned a yard sale to be held "More Like the Master" were American Legion Auxiliary
paren ts, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
president.
on Oct. 5-7, Church plates ate . read by Mrs. Nancy Smith.
Peck and other relatives.
being aold 11 another money· ' The wonder box was won by
Mr , and Mrs . Man ford
making project and can be Mrs . Smith . Refreshments
Smith, Carroll, visited with
purchued from any member were served to those named
U1eir oon and daughter·in-law,
of the cllu.
and Mr5 . Delores WiU, Mrs. Wilson , Mrs. Beatrice Buck,
Mr. and Mr5. Lewis Smith and
A round-r:.obln card was Mary Bowen, Mrs. Mabel Mrs. Beulah utterbach, Miss
family,
including the Larry
signed for Mrs. Jesse Grif- Moore, Mrs. Agnes Dixon, Mrs. Freda Leh·ing, Patty Ed\l'ards,
,Stanleys from F.rie, Pa ., who
fllh, a former
mem- Mildred Mitch, Mrs. Anna and Becky Will.
were guests here.

DEAR POLLY- My husband ruined the varnished
wood surface of our bed headboard. Everywhere his hand
or arm rested on the wood it turned white and the spots
were impossible to remove. After we bought new furm·
ture I worried about that
bed headboard . To protect
it I made a giant·size "pil·
lowcase" that slides over
it at night. Even old shee ts
can be used to make such
a covering. Leave openings
at. the top edge for any
knobs, posts, etc., to go
through. !lay ours over tlie
pillows before pulling up
the bedspread for the day·
time hours . This not only
protects the headboard from the touch of his skin but
from scratches that might be made by rmgs and harr
rollers.
I also want to tell those who sew that, when sewin g in
basting stitches for ea5ing in sleev.es in garments, use
a con trasting color thread so there rs no huntmg fo r the
right thread to pull up to gather the sleeve. - KATHY
DEAR POLLY- If your pet hates to be sprayed fo r
fleas, etc. , put the spray on a rag and rub it in the fur .
It works great-S. D.

AH 15 READY
TO SEE TI-l'
VOTER r=uM
DOGPATCH-

. W~INGTON

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-THE
or=r= tCE

NO!/- IT'S A BIG
CORPORATION
LAW'/ER, FROM

HEW 'fORK!!

·. ·. OF ·

EN AH DON'T HAFTA WEAR THIS
®11'!! HAT, OR TOTE n-\15-!f.'.'®~

SQUIRFU:L:GU"'!!- GtT THAT .JUG

OUTA HERE., AN' BRING BACK
MAH Ct-IAMI'AGNE. !! r----"

60 SPE-CIAL

OPPRE~D

IN FOLICE V.ORK, KA'ItiY.
NOT NAN'! COLLEGE
~DENTS ARE 1\-iE~
t:\O&gt;.YS.

ABOUT FRED,
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MINORmE5 .

He/..l.0,6E:SS! I'D LIKE

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PHOGBC&gt;LND

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WHO KNOW'?

BUT .5HE SEEMS
HAPPY A&amp; A
LARK.

(NEWSPAPER £NTUPR!SE ASSN.)

You will receive a doUar If Polly uses your favorite
homemaking Idea, Pet Peeve, PoUy's Problem or solution
to a problem. Write Polly In care of this new• paper,

Party Given For Pastor
Mr. Clifford Smith, ordained
at the Barberton Church of
Christ on Sept. 10, was honored
recently by the Bradford
Church of Christ with a dinner
party during which time a
pourd showe r was held for him
and his family and · a gift
certificate was presented to
him .
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Wise of
the Rutland Church presented
devotions and special music .
Present were Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Durst and Timmy, Mrs .
Madeline Painter , Diane,
Becky and Victor ; Mr. and
Mrs . Tip Wilt, Mrs. Jessie
White and Joy, Mr. and Mrs.

Jim Hazelton, Jane, Tim and
Cynthia, Mr . and Mrs. Homer
Forrest, Mrs. Frances Hysell ,
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Hysell,
Linda, Donald and Donna Kaf,
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gilkey
and Mark, Mr'. and Mrs. Ben
Rife, Carla and Becky. Mrs .
Nora Cambron, Mrs. Norma
Russell, Mrs. Eleanor Hoover
and Laura, Mrs. Lillian Bentz,
Mrs. Evelyn Wood, Keith ,
Bonnie, Rodney and Lori Jane,
Verna Hysell, Mrs . Alma
White, Brian Justice, Mr. and
Mrs. Keith Wise, Rod Kasley,
Diana Wise, Bob Bender, and
the honored family .

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Yetrlerday'o Cryptoqaole: THE BEST TIME TO STAR'!/'
THINKING ABOUT YOUR RETIREMENT IS BEFORE TH&amp;
BOSS DOES.-SOUBCE UNKNOWN
,.

6tu.wwd'

(0 1872 l.iDI

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ARE ON TAP in the

Frigidaire
Skinny Mini.
Fits almost
anywhere.
(Only 2feet wide)

ACROSS
I. Yokel
5. Construct
11. C•nter
II. Toiled

Yellow
Pages

erate

If. A way out

DICK TRACY

of prison
15. "... who

VOUR GLASSES ARE
BROKEN, VOUR CLOTHES
ARE OIRTV.

are stout-

hearted

.

IS. Performed
11. Salt (Fr.)
ll. lnvesti·
gators
zt. Before
tl. Not a bit
H. Chesler·
field , e.g.
U Frail
25. English
poet

Permanent Press
Care.

zs. Otherwis~

In bath Washer &amp; Dryer.
Helps nr&gt;iron clothes keep
lhetr promise.

Z7. Pierce
%8. Jewel

Dacron dryer
lint screen.

::::::ILJ:r

S~!R KELT GOfS

CO\II'LfTELY TO
PIECE5.!li'FORE THE
(A,IIf~AS OF 1y:1.P.
~l'f~ THE GUN'
WHfN H15 AmMPT
TO REFUTE OCLORE5'

' QWf6E5 FAILS ...

Where the wash is-kitchen,

2-Speed Washer.

Re&amp;ular plus Delle~te set·
lings for the fabric flexlbll·
ity a flmily washer mull

you can get adequate wir·
ing, plumbing and venting.

hm.

Fami~·Size.

'-

UnBCrsmble theoe four Jumblet,
one letter to eath ICIUilft, to
form four ordinary words.

I UGOBS

THE NUT PULLEP A
GUN! HE 'I7 HAVE
'5!101 THAT CCY I

JUST NEVER TRUST A POLITIC!/111 ... 'I?N'T
LOOI&lt; LIKe YOU'l l EVER lfARN
50NNY!

r

Yesterday's Answer
lZ. Cross out
16. Gainsay
II. Fore·
shadow
22. Nucleus
%3. Delight
24. Sump·
tuous
%5. Slay
(2 wds.)

%7. Network
%9. Belonging
to
them
30. Rich cake
31. German
city
36. Scottish
explorer
37. Lambkin's
cry

I

YERFO

II

[TRYDAW

()

I

_..............
,,,l-,,.,.C•~

...

~-

rn

I tJ

~REEF ~

I

SOUNI:'5 LIKE 'THIS
CIWOK ISN'T

IN 17AN6eR.
Now IIITU(e the eln:led letlen

D I (J ~:::J'::~~-:-.:o:

1

b-+-+-4-

%I.. Italian

ELtE~ : ~ .~ .ou;J;s5iE:Eew(i;)~~~!~~

anywhere.

bath, nursery ... anywhere

song

3. Pipe up
(3 wds.)
4. German
article
5. Sover·
eignty
6. Highways
7. Norse
healin g
goddess
8. VIew
with
a
jaundiced
eye
(3 wds.)
9. Aerial
naviga.
lion
system

r ..ture. SYadteatt. Inc.)

~lg~~;::t.:::::,_,c

2. Rodgers
and Hart

IS. A&amp;SeV·

Fine mesh removes lint par·
tictes. Easy to ruch for
cleaning.

Installs almost

HE GUPPOII'T'G

~·· r=&gt;r

: SENATOR .

r·~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~!!~~~~~~~~-·

1,. .. - -... I A (

port
3!. In the past
33. Ancient
Hebrew

II I ) ( I I I I I )
{AMwtln ta. .rrowJ

Jumbl.., un11 nASI IMPun
. S•l•nl•y'•

measure

34. Mater·
familias
S5. Victory
Bymbol
37. Kind of
dog
38, Require
19. Price paid
40. I told

An 1wen rJ'Acll you 1100adcba't do

HOOI(UP

If you

L

_ _. L

L

.I

neGra ne t'neafea.

al p!f-"Pun" If PAST HIM

---"lrt ..----·-·----.,
To Whom It May
Concern;

you so!

41. An Arab
land
DOWN
1. Holdin g
device

Washes and dr ies family.
size load s- at the same
time or independently.

1--------.....1

"THAT's WHAT\;

FRIEND iS INTERESTED

~

News, Event

Mrs. Gary Patrick Northup

1 1M GLAD '/OUR BOY

'"""J±\1.":~~,)~'{~"·&gt;'"~'~1 "·"'"'~&lt;· ·::··=~'&gt;:&gt;'..&lt;.=&lt;»&gt;Xh&lt;"»W.~~
~=·'-'E"'*,."'»="""""'""''~~~~~~~
• ;;.:.r~-,~-~h:::~:'k.Mh.-l-;:&lt;&gt;;
•

Carpenter

have return ed from a vacation
trip to Was hington, D. C. and
Canada.
Mrs. Mendal Jordan accompanied her daughter, Mrs .
Kenn et h Crabtree, to Cin·
cinnati where they were guests
of Mr . and Mrs, Walter Jordan
for the day and viewed points
of interest there.
Lois Gaston, who is attending
Career Academy in Columbus,
vi,ited her pa rents, Mr . and
Mrs. Paul Gaston, over the
weekend .
Hollis Throckmor ton, Milton,
W. Va . who lived in th is area as
a child, catted on Murl
Calaway and others in the
communi ty, recently.
Ron Burke celebrated his
birthday an d Billy Holcomb

~
~

to:UJD OF -n;aEE
iS IT, /1\eEK?

--BUT SHE'S GI VIN' TWICET AS'
MUCH MI LK SI NCE I GOT HER
TH' NEW OSTRITCH PLUME HAT

ModellCT·2
llundr)' Center

BAKER FURNITURE

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-He1·e's how to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
lo LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A .Is .
Wed for lhe three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sinale letters,
apostrophes the length and formation of the words are all ·
hints. Each 'day the code letters are differ-ent.
'

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

CRYPTOQliOTES
QOU

'

Dear Whom,

QUNFOUJ

SL

BIU

XOB

WNEUL

QX B S A U NL T J BX X 0 U J U B I P Z B I U
TJUX GUYBJU. -U PGUJQ OMGGNJA

I

1--/;;;;;;===::i;!.-..;,J L-.L----.--....t.__.:.j

�.,

Largest Freshman Class, 45,
Arrives For Nurses Training

tt.:_ l'he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Sept. 25,1972

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
Wanted

Help Wanted

Poineroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGIIS
Of
QUALITY
1970 CHEVROLET

.

'

CARRIERS
WANTED

52895

Pomeroy ·Motor Co•.

Hartford, W. Va.
PHONE 992-215~

Notice

WAN•T· ADS..

KOSCOT KOSMETIC5 and

, , DEADI.INES

wigs, more new prod u,cts
comi ng soo n. For free1
demonstration, phone 992 -

i P .M. Day Before Publicat iorf.
Monday Deadl i ne 9 a .m .

Cance llat ion - Correc ti ons
Wilt be accepted un t il 9 a .m. for .

REGULATION 5

5113 .

for more than one incorre c1
insert ion .

' R-ATES

tFor Wan, Ad ser vice
5 cents per Word one in ser!Jon
Minimum Cha rg e 75c
12 cen ls per word th r ee
~ onsecut ive insertioris.
18 cen ts per 'word s~ con•
iecu t ive Insert ions. ,
25 Per Cent Disc ount on paid
ads and 11ds paid within 10 da ys.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

$1.50 for 50 word m inimum .
Ea ch additional word 2c .
BLIND ADS

Additional 25c Chafg e per
Adver1isement .
~8 : 30a . m,.

HOU11 ~

WANTED
CHIPWOOD

' - - - " - ; - - - " - ' - -~'1

.

The' Publis her reserves th e :
I~Jhf to ed it or reject any ads
deemed
obiecliOn!ll.
The.
publ isher wil l not be respons l bl~'

OFFJC£

Wanted

8·17-tfc

Day of PUb l icat ion

tQ S:OO,p .m, Da ily_
8 : 30 a . m . to 12 : 00 1\l oo r
Saturday .

"HEll'.

Poles
Muimom
Diameter
10" Ill

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

WindOio''
Air Condilioro~rs
Hot Waler Healers
Plumbing
Elec trical Work

urges! End

'6.00 Per Ton
DELIVERED

ARNOLD
BROlHERS

TO

OHIO
PAU.£T CO.

992 ·2448
. 'Omeroy, 0.

Carpenter
News, Event

phone 991.3658.

On Old Rl 33
Phoile 992-2689

WIL L give away kittens. Cal l
992-5247 or see at 1165 Vine
St ree t, Middleport .

Pamerur. Ohio

9-19.61c
VIRG IN lA's Beauty Sa lon on

FURNI SHED 3-room house and
bath, adults on ly. Phone 992 -

$10 ; 1 end tables, S10 ; I
bathrnom chrome towel pole,
$3; 1 finished, like new in-

1413.

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55

.

9.14·3tp
APPLES.

Filzpalr~ck

9·21·11&lt;

Or-

char ds, State Route 689 .
Phone Wi lkesvi ll e 669-3785.

Park view Kennels, Phone 992-.

, I
8-15·lfc l

------=--

STE RE O-rocker console. 4
speed intermixed changer ,
dual vo l ume con tr ol, 4
apartments.
•t spe~ker soun d system,
4-11.flct beautiful hand rubbed Walnut
tin i.sh . Ba lance $66 .3.4 . Use our

the

· Nathan Biggs

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

POODL'E puppies, · 51 1ver · toy·,
5443.

From th e largest
Bulldozer Radiator to
Small est Heater Core.

On Most American Cars

8·30-fl c

5591.

Radi.;ttor Specialist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph: 992·2 114

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
OpenS TiiS
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy , 0 .

Pomeroy

eROOFING
•HEATING ·
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
•SPOUTING
•P AINTING . .
For Free fs!jmate · .

BilL OSBORNE, Eastern High halfback, is on a sweep
at his own left end but Southern's big Nick !hie (34) is ready

·PHONE ~92:2550

unfurAished
0

hone 991-5434.

DOZER and back hoe work , WILL · CUT or trim trees.
r easonable ; also clean out
base ments,
att ics
and
cel lar s; phone 949-322 1.

ponds an d septic tanks , ditching service; top soil, ti l l
di rt , l im estone; B&amp;K Excavati ng . Phone 992-5367.

budget lerm s. Call 99U085.
8-19-JOtc
9-24-6tc
Dick Karr. Jr .
furnished, 408 Spring Ave .. - - - - -- - -- 9-l-Ife o· tiELL WHEEL alignment
Pomeroy .
located at Crossroads. RI. 124.
8·10·1fc
BAC KHOE AND DOZER work· Complete front end ser¥1ce,
HOUSEHOLD AUCTION
Septic tanks insta lled . Georca
tune up and brake service .
TRAILER . Brown 's Trai l er THE personal properly of R. B.
(.Bit
II
Pullins.
Phone
991-1 47~.
Wheels balanced elecSa
yre
wil
l
be
sold
at
his
Court , Min ersv i l l e. Ohio ;
troni ca lly .
All
work.
4·15.tfc
r esidence located across from
phone 992-3324.
3 ROOM

apartment ,

un ·

9 19 6tc

Rl . 33. SATURDAY, Sepl. 30,
1971. 10:30 A.M. CURV~D
GLASS CHIN A CUPBOARD

For Sale
6

TIRES 7·14•5 and 3 standard
!ires ; wheel s and axles fr om
mobi le home ; ph one 992 38 I B.

9·113fc
CAST iron bath tub. lavatory
an d commode ; all with fi t
lings, good co nditi on ; phone

992 3196 or 992-1111.

9

11-Jic

FOR YOUR health 's sake ea t
organically grown toma toes;
B. Qu isenber ry has large
ones, lOc pound all he old Post
Offi ce building . Syracuse ,
Ohi o.

9J7.J1tp
16'

CAMPING

United M e th odist Chu r ch,
New Haven, West Va . on Sta te

TRA ILER ,

Sha sta. l ike new. Phone 985 ·

3849 .

9·7·301c
1911 KAWASAKI 100 excellenl
condit ion . Rea dy to go ,
sacrifice f or only $285 .
Coolvill e 667-6214 .

Glass door China Cup .
board , Goot us Glass Plate ,
Northwood Green Carnival
Dish, Warw ick China, Water
Lao Pottery , Nort hwood
Vase , Czechos lovak Vas e,
Two Glass Standing Bears,
Be ll Glass Bow l , Wh ile
Marked Carni val di sh with
Grape Band, Depres sion
Glass
Cream
Pitch er,
Depression Glass Bow ls and
Candy Di sh, Tulip Pitcher,
Pigeon Blood Goblets and
di shes, Depre ssion Glass
Candy dish , Bava ir Plate .
Hobart Berry Set. Two McCoy
Vases. Pressed Glass, Dai sy

Creamer
&amp; Sugar,
48 Sal
Harts,p
Beer Glasses,
Ma ster
Drop Leaf Table, Severa l
Lamps , Hobart Clock , Mantel

Clock MU ZZLE LOAD ING
RIFLE, IVER JOHNSON
PISTOL CO IN &gt; - Indian
Head Penn ies. 1832-33 Half
Do l lar s, Silve r Quar ters,
Si lver Dimes , TW02 112 Dollar
GOLD
Pie c es,
Buffalo
Nickels. Qu ilts Flowe r
Garden , Bird, Endless Chain .
Neck Tie, Pudd in' &amp; Pie.

l&lt;EAPY ·MI X
dell v~re d

guaranteed .
rates. Pho ne

CONCRETE

99n113.

right to ')'Our
project . Fast and easy . Free
estimates. Phone 992· 3284-,.
Goeg l ein Ready-Mi x Co .,

Middleport, Ohio.

RP-.o:,...n-.hl ... .
742 -3232 or

EARTH MOVING
Dozer &amp; End loader work, ·
ponds, basement, · - ~~~d~
scaping. W_e · have· 2 ;-SI~~
dozers, 2 size load.ers. · Wor~
done by hour · or (O(IJ~ad:
Free Estimates. We _-also
haul fill dirt, top soil. Dump
tru(ks and low-boY tor hii-e.

·

See Bob or Roger Jeffers,

Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525

/.u .nc · after

1

p.m. or phone 992·

5232.

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?
L os t
your
operator's li cense? Ca U 992--

1966.

6-30-lfc

6·15-tfc

R. E. TRACY, 5r . Dislribulor,
Fire and Satety Equ ipmen t
Since 1942 . 125 M echanic
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. Sales
and Service. Phone 992-2804 or

SEPTIC TA NKS CLEfiNED
REA50NAB LE rates. Ph . 446- SE PTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
9915146.
.
Sanitati on, Stewart, Ohio. Pn.
4781. Gal lipolis. John Russel l,
9-12·3lc
662·3035.
Owner &amp; Operator .
1·11.tfc 'SeWING MACHI!OES. Repair
.
.
f12 ·tfC
- -- -- - - -- service, all makes. 991-1184.
The Fabric 5hop, Pomeroy.
C. BRA DFORD. Auctioneer
Real Estate For Sale
Complete Service
Authorized 5inger &gt;ales and
Phone 949-3821
NEW al l electric home by
~erv l ce . We Sharpen Scissors.
Rac i n e~", Ohio
ow ner . J bedr ooms, 2 baths,
. 3·!9·tfC
'Cr i tf Bradford
fireplace, carpet, near Meigs
5·1·1fc High School , $25,000 f irm . Sio E US F'6R : &gt;&lt;w nmgs, ~)orh\
doors and windows, carports,
Phone 991.3183.

-=:. : ======:_,
9-15-12fc

te:_£F~orr_S~a~l~e__
rFR~e~a~l~E~s~ta~

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. ·Broker

marquees, ~luminum 'Siding
and rail ing. ~A. Jacob. sales
representative . For free;
estima tes, ··phone Charlu
Lisle, Syrac use , V . V.
Johnson and Son, Inc. •

3·2·tf•

110 Mechanic Street

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
WORKING MAN 'S SPECIAL
POMEROY - Large 8 room house with 5 bedrooms, bath ,
and nice k itchen . Front and ba ck porches. Full basement.

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF

APPOINTMENT

Case No . l07S4
Estale of JA NIE ELIZABETH
SNID ER . Deceased .
Notice is her eby given that
Carolyn Janet Reeves , Of
Pomeroy , Oh io, has been duly
a ppo inted Exe c utrix of the
Estate of Jan ie Eliza beth
Snider . dece11sed . lat e ol Meigs
Counly . Oh io.
Creditors are req uired to f ile
lh ei r cla ims with such fudiciary
within four monthS .
Dat ed thiS 13th day Of S~ p ­
l ember , 197 2.
Men nlno D. W~bsttr
Judge
ColJrt of Common Pleas.
Probal e Pi vis ion

Only $7,500.00.
Be dsprea d s. Sheets ,
Margie Jeffers, along with
. Li mestone, ExcelsiOr
Business Opportunities COAL
Blankets
,
Pi
ll
ow
Cases
.
MIDDLEPORT
Pam Grow and Nancy Meyers
5alt Works, E. Main &gt;t ..
Crosley T .V. , Kenmor e Fuel
3 BEDROOMS - Ni ce kitchen, breakfast nook , uti l ily
Pomeroy,
Phone
992-389
1.
of the Jackson area spent
Hea ter , Carved Ba ck
room . carpeting and paneling . Old fashion bath . Concrete
4-11·1fc Oil
9-JOOic
Rocker , Cher ry Bed &amp;
severa l days vacationing in
TRAIN TO BE A
front porch . Nice yard .
· -- - - - Dresse r , Couch Occ. Chair ,
Florida . They visited points of
LARGE HOME
1970 TRAVELMATE Camper,
Unusual Tree Base Lam p
PLU S - A large one story building 40x70 . Jl,.,. acres of
in terest includin g Disney Help Wanted
model Safari. $1,400 ; phone
Stand, Stone Ja r s, Wa sh
level land . 4 bedroom home, Ph baths, modern kitchen ,
991.5491.
Tubs. Gen . Elec1ric Ref .,
World, Cy press Gardens, WAITRE5SE5. full and partwa
ll to wal l carpeting. Ask ing only $13,000.00.
9-2J.6lc
Elect. Hotpoint Stove , Picno
ex per ience
Daytona Beach .an&lt;l, Cape time ;
COUNTRY HOME
hJres, Gas Cook St ove .
nigh_t shltt; apply
Kennedy and went deep sea necessary;
2
BEDROOMS
Bath,
enclosed porch , garage. Level Lot
WIN
CHE
&gt;TER
Model
11,
1
1
WAGON &gt;EAT. Be"c h Vise,
in per~J1f} Blue Tartan .
Plains wa ter. Only $4.000 .00.
fishing,
'•
gauge
shotg
un,
modif
ied,
hammer
s,
saws,
Wrecking
9·19·6tc
3BEDROOMS
$175; Warm Morn ing coal
Bars , Wren ches, Bol ts. Hand
Mr. Jess F. McGrady of - - - - -ROUT E 338 - An older home that can be r enovated into a
burner, good conditi on, $30 ;
191 18. 15 1101 1. 3tc
Tools,
Shoe
La
sl.
Oval
Top
Rockbridge, was Gideon BABY5 1TT ER in my home, 1
HIGH PAYING
phone (}92-5044 .
comfortable place . Has a large lot. Give us a good offer.
Trunk, Deer Horn , Hat Ra ck
ch ild , must have r eferences ;
speaker at the Temple United
WHAT A DEAL
9·24-3lp and
OPPORTUNITIES
large
No.
of
phone 992-3489 after 3: 30p .m.
NOTICE OF
Miscellaneous
Items.
AUCT.
3
BEDROOMS
Modern home, bath, fireplac e
Methodist Church on Sunday.
Learn to buy cantt, hogs and
APPOINTMENT
9-1111tc
1
967
FORD
truck
,
FIOO,
Mr . Sayre is
( modern). and 4 room block bu ilding for a bus iness on Rt .
NOTE shtap . Wt prefer to train
Ca se No . 20 ,712
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wetnall,
Reyno lds 71 n 12 dump ,
di scon tinuing
housekeeping
men
with
llftllock
exptrl·
7
business loop. Ask ing on ly 525.000.00 lor both .
Es tate of Will iam R. Ba iley
Columbus, were weekend HAVE i mmediate open ing for
Cheste r axl e, new t ir es. A-1
enu. For loeal lnttNitw,
Dece&lt;"sod .
and is selling al l the above
165 ACRES
l ime office girl ; typing
writt age , phone, addrns &amp;
con dition . Phone 614-887 -2165.
Notice Is hereby gillen that
that he has used and ac .
guests of Mr. and Mrs. William part
1
HO
US
E&gt;
Plenty
of
pasture
and
hunl
ing
land
.
Al
l
essential. shorthand helpful
background to:
Clarence R. Bailey of 119
9.1J.Jtp
cumulated in past 70 year s.
M inera ls . 2 houses, 3 spring s. 4 farm ponds . Several
Miller and daughters.
but not required ; Write Box
Seever . Spr ingf ield , has been
There are many nice old
NAnONAL MEAT PACKERS
build ings. Good gravel road, sc hool and mai l route s.
du ly appoin ted Admin istrator
The Busy Bee Society of the 729·A. C·OThe Daily Senti nel,
ant
ique
items
and
have
been
lliAINING
97 ACRES
Wilh the Will Annexed of the
Pomer oy, Ohio 45769, giv ing
Carpenter Baptist Church met
we l l cared f or . TERMS :
3435 Broodway
Es tate of Wi lliam R. Blliley ,
EASTERN
SCHOOL
DI
STRICT
Hil
l
!arm
for
beef
full resum e wi th r efer ences.
SOME SAY DISCOUNT!
CASH. NOT RESPDNSIBLE
Kan111 City, Mo. 64111
decettsed , lale of M iddleport,
at the church with Bonnie
cattle . 8 room modest home , with modern bath , furna ce
previous employment, and
We Say It's Our
FOR ACC IDENTS. OWN ER •
Meigs County , Ohio.
!raining .
and semi -modern kitchen. 40 acres of meadow . A ll
Cheadle as devotional leader.
ATTN : Dept. No. OH·41
R.
B.
Sayre
.
BRADFORD
Cre dilor s 11re r eqlJired lo file
mine rals. NOW ONLY $19,500.00.
9·3·ffC
Others present were Metta
SLACKS
their claims with uid f idu ci ary
AUCT ION CO., Ra cine, Ohio.
CALL AND HAVE A LOOK AT ONE OF THESE . 50ME
wi thin four months .
Ph 949·3811 or 3161. Lunch
Fisher, Anna Lich, Vivian ATTE NTION LADIES-Sell Wanteli To Buy
Dated. lh ls 1 ~ 1 h day of Sep .
ARE A REAL BARGAIN, OTHERS AGOO D BUY. THEN
SPECIAL
wil l be se rved by New Haven
!ember 1972 .
Gaston, Emma Whittington,
Toys &amp; Gif t s now thru
LI
ST
WITH
US
FOR
BE5T
RE5UL
T&gt;
.
Fir emen .
Manning o . Webster
December with the oldes t Toy GA LLI POLl&gt; 'resident wants to
Buy 2 Pairs and
f'rcda Smith, Ida Cheadle and
9-24 -21c
buy
a
·business.
Will
buy
Ju dge of
Party Plan In the Country .
HELEN
L.
TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
Lynn McWhorter.
992·3325
business and property or
Get! PAIR FREE
Meigs County
High est commissions, No
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
Common Pleas Cour t
i ness with lea se. Ca ll
Mrs. Goldie Gillogly has
Cash Outlay . Ca ll or wrlle bus
All kinds, all sizes for m en,
Probate Dill is ion
Gal
lipolis
446-4.408
,
Mobile
Homes
For
Sale
"
Santa'
s
Parties",
Avon
Ct
.
women. young men, boys
returned from a vacation trip
(9 ) 18, 25 1101 2. 31
5
ROOM)
&amp;
bath,
1
story
block.
9-10·11tc
0600 1. Tel. I (103) 673-3455.
5 ROOM hou se t or sale. one
and girls. Hurry to
10 x 55 EXPANDO. 1 bedroom ,
to Florida. She accompanied
house ; gas for ced air furnace.
ALSO BOOKING PARTIES.
third acre gr ound, f ront
laun
dr
y
room,
$2,800
;
phone
POMEROY
11.,. acre lot , Rt . 7 &amp; Old Chester
ORDINANCE TO
her brother ·and sister-in-law,
porch , fu l l ba se men!, S. D.
9-J-lfc OLD Furnllure: oak tables.
741·4406.
Rd . · $5,5011 ; phone 991-3874. Buskirk . 341 Page 51, Mid·
VACATE STREET
"·
_
Jack
W
.
Ca
rsey
,
Mgr
.
Mr. and Mrs. T, R. Boring,
9·n3Jp
org ans, di shes. Clocks, brass
To vaca te 20 teet alley, from
8·19.tic
dl eport.
WANTED, Toy Coun . beds. or complete households. alii Phone 992·2181
Ea st Ma in Street to Cliffs.
McArthur. and another sister- HELP
selors . Santa Claus JUSt told
9·10tp
Whereas , on lhe 17 th dav of
Write M. D. Miller, Rt . 4,
in-law, Mrs. Fermin Boring.
1970 3 BEDROOM Iota I electri c, OUT OF STATE . IDEAL 5·
me, something to te ll you .
July , 191 2, a pet ilion by persons
Pomeroy, Ohio. 'Call 991·6171.
ACRE RANCH. Lake Con - 5 ROOM house. double garage, owning lots in lhe immed iate
x 60. with expa.ndo liv ing
They were guests of a brother- He is very busy, this Chnstmas
6-18-ltc ' JU 5T TAKEN IN , Si ng er r12oom
cha s, New Mexi co. $2975 . No
and
bed
r
oom,
excel
len
I
'72
:
double lo t, Anderson Str eet, v lclnlly of a 20 feet alley , lyino
Sewing Machine . Will se ll for
in·lm.l and sister, Mr. and Mrs.
down . No inleresl. $25 per mo .
condition, pri ce $7,000 ; for
Ma son, W. Va ., phone 1-304- between lots 240 and 241 and
So join our Playhouse Par ty
sma
ll
ba
lance
of
$36
.21
or
for
119 mos . Vacat ion
le ad ing from East M ain Street ,
James Bethel in Lakeland, and
mor
e
informat
ion
ca
ll
West
713·5606.
gang;
payments may be arranged.
th rougl1 sai d lots toward the
rad
i
se
.
Free
Bro
chur
e
.
Pa
Jeffer5on, 0 . 879 -759J .
visited many points of interest. Earn money and Gree n Stamps,
9·1Hfc cl iff beh ind said lots , wa s du l'l'
Phone 991-533 1.
Ran chos Lake Conha s: Box
too
;
9-176tc
to council praying
9·7·ttc
A wiener roast was held in
1001 DO. Alameda, California BY OWNER • price red uced for presented
Bring Your Unhulled
---Give Santa Claus a helping
thai sai d alley , between th e
94501.
the Temple Church Grove by
hand.
sale; ow ner leav ing points named, be vl!lca l ed : and
8 TRACK 5TEREO. fre ight r - - - - - -- - -""1
8-19·30tp quick
Mr . and Mrs . Arthur Crabtree Thi s Christmas ' 72 .
state ; Jbedroom house. liv ing nol ice ot tne pendancy and
damaged. in beautiful walnut
·Air Conditioners
r oom , din ing room, kitchen pl'" ayer of said pelit lon has been
console. Will se ll for SI01.50or
and Don Comer for the youth of CA LL Margaret Fortune, 949·
541 4 or Barbara Lam bert,
and bath , full basement , gas given as required bV law by
pay SUO per week . Phone 991·
•Awnings
publ icat ion in lhe Sen tinel , a
th e co mmun ity on Sunday
446;3411 .
fu rnace, Chester water , on newspa per of general cir .
5331.
·•
UndPrpinning
evening. Those attending ingood blacktop road ; small culation In lhe co,-poralion for
9-Jo.ftc
9·7·tfc
CLELAND REALTY
ba rn and fi sh pond ; phone 843· six co nse cut ive weeks ending
cluded Vicky and Bruce - - - - - TO OUR
mobi le home
608 E. Ma in St .
1194.
Augvsl 28th. 1972, and,
FOUR beaulitul songs by John 'Complete
Gillogly, Debbie and Laurie Notice
MECHANICAL
service ...... plu s g igantic
Whereas . Counc i l , upon
Pomeroy
9·14-6lc
Mohl
er
on
.45
r
.p.m.
Act
ion
hearing is sat isfied thai there Is
Miller, Shelia Wooten, Cheryl
HULLER
'dispfay
of
mobile
homes
'
·992·2259
Records No. ACt043A. (C&amp;W ) a lway s available at .. .
safe and fasl with
good ca use for such vacat ion as
Lawson, Mark Gillogly, Bryan REDUCE
" Rainbow
Valley "
a nd
HOUSE in Long goftom , ph9n~: prayed tor , that It wil l not be
Gobese lablets and E·Vap
..
and Keith J orda n, Greg
" Snowballs in the Rockies";
detr im ental to th e general in ·
985-3519.
" water pill s," Nelson Drug .
MILLER
Your Walnuts will be
POMEROY - Over 5 acres .
l er es l , ill"'a ought to be ma de ,
!S acred) " Our Lord God
6·11 -ttc now
Blanton, Jeffrey and Alesa
9·25-1tp
therefore ,
1
balhs.
Din
ing
18&lt;12.
Livi
ng
Physician
"
and
"God
'
s
Sweet
Hulled Free of Charge
Gillogly, Russell and Kevin
It Ordain ed by lhe Counci l
Be
MOBILE
HOMES
27x30,
firep
lace
.
Kitchen
has
Love .'' Specia I! Pick up your
of the Vil lage of Pomeroy, State
and We Will Pay You.
Stainl
ess
Steel
ran
ge.
oven
,
Crabtree, Richard and Vicky For Sale
record ing now at Bill &amp; Lee's
1220 Washington Blvd.
Of Ohio,
•
sink , dishwasher, all built-in .
Music Center at BRW Ha rd- &lt;23·7521
Comer and Kathy Massey .
BELPRE,
D.
Section 1: That the 20 feet
3 YOUNG male Beegle dogs and
17ft. of base cabinets, 10 11.
ware Bldg., Pomeroy , Ohio ;
alley , ly ing between lots 2-40 and
Mrs. Murl Ga lawa y enI registere d blue flck coon
1
.
'
l
.,
of upper . Full basement with
only suo, save 50c.
241. from Main slreet to the cl iff
Per Hundred
dog . Phone 949.4761.
terta in ed members of th e
large Rec . room . fireplace .
be and the same is hereby
_
_
__
_
_
_
_
9._
1
4-6tc
'cAStj
paid
for
all
ma~es
ana
Pounds
va cated .
Utility room . 2 car garage .
Temple Church W.S.C.S. for
mode l s of mobile homes .· $35,000 .00.
Sec t ion 2: Tha tlh is ord inan ce
YARD SA LE . 6 mi. E. of ·phone area code 614•41J.95J.r.
their Se ptembe r meeting.
be and rema in In force from and
After
they
Real Estate Fo; Sale
Chester on Rt . 148; Ella
4-13·ff&lt;
after the earlies t period allowed
Election of officers was held .
MIDDLEPORT
~
are Hulled
Hannum , phone 98 5-335.4 ;
1
by ta w .
bedrooms, Ma ste r
has
Mrs . Arth ur Crabtre e, 1 ROOM house and 1 acre of
Sept. 18, :19-and 30th ; Walnut ··A t "ale. S
land , localed on Portlahd·
lavatory
and
conso le
bedroom
suite.
S40
;
Wine
U
0
lol
COU NCIL OF VILLAGE
president: Mrs. William
Ba shan Road . Can be seen by
dressing lable,all have large
OF POMEROY
living
room
suite,
$10
;
Tap.
1
970
PONTIAC
GTO,
4
speed
;
Miller, vice-pres.; Mrs. Donald
appoin t ment. See George
Slar1 Buying October 2. 1912.
closets . Bath has ceramic
Do nald Collins
pan
gas
rang
e
•.
$15
;
breakfast
cal
l
7
1.3977.
4
Holler at Miner svi lle, Ohio.
President of Council
tile /
shower ,
console
Comer, secreta ry ; and Mrs.
sel. S15 : goss1p ben ch, SIO;
Atlest :
9.nJtc lavat ory and olher features .
9·25·6f'c
T .V. ta bl e, $10 ; Maytag
Robert Mattox, treasurer,
Jan e Walton
1Jrt
YOUR
DIAL
Living
12&lt;20.
Kitchen
has
15
washer, $25 ; G. E. Dryer,
Clerk
were those selected.
tt.
ba
se,
15
ft
.
upper
150
1
Auto
Sales
'1ronmg
E. ironer
, s o; Real Estate For Sale
; G.board,
cabinets , built -in range,
Prayer and hymn singing
S5 ; Com ·191 18 , 15, 1Jc
1970
VOLK
5WAGEN,
good
pressor, SlO ; f _
a rm wagon - 2 RACINE 10 room house ; I oven, disposa l and air
were enjoyed by the group and
cond•t •on, new pain l , cal l
conditione r. Uti lity . Car.
Sa~
beds, S50 ; wmdow fan. $5 ; bath , basement, garage two
the hostess served delicious
after 6 p.m. 991.3401.
peled throughout. Gas F.A.
Big CapacJty
canis ter sweeper , $40 ; sew ing -iols . Phone 949·4313 .
refre shm en ts. Plans were
9·2H tp
Moy111
furnace . Carport and patio.
ma chine.
S75;
other
H ·lfp
P. 0. Box 267
992-3891
Autom1t1cs
$18,500.00.
hou se hold Items .
made for attendance at the
2 speed operation.
Pomeroy, Ohio
9-10lp PT PLEASANT - 6 room
District meeting in Nelsonville. Nathan Brady, Ashland, 0 .;
Cho ice of wattr
MIDDLEPORT - 2 story
house, l112 baths, r ecreation
temps .
Au1 o.
Mr. and Mrs . T. J. Spurlock, Mr . and Mrs. Garland Brady,
frame , S larg e bedrooms
MAPLE Stereo -radio com .
wat:er ·
level
r oom , new built -in kitchen ,
W.C.
l'h
baths
.
Cellar
.
Albany; Mr. and Mrs. Reed Athens; Mr . and Mrs. Donald
control .
L lnt
GE NSENG. S50 lb. Beef hide bination, AM-FM radio, 4 must sell, leaving town . Day s Garage . Ca rport. Nice
Jeffers and Mr. and Mrs. Sl&lt;lrks and daughters, Mann,
speaker
sound
system
,
4
F
liter
or
Power
phone
992
·3502.
evenings
$3 .50 each . Maran Fure
kitchen . Close to shopping
Fin Agitator . ·
Arthur Crabtree enjoyed a W. Va .; Mr. and Mrs. Edwin
House, Mason, W. Va . 773- speed automa tic changer, phone 675.2371.
and
playground. $12.800.
Ptrmi· Prtn
separa~
controls
.
Belance
5296.
8·JO.tfc
potluck supper at the home of Peck and Denver , Amesville;
Moytog
S78.19.
Use
our
budget
terms.
9-10·3tc
POMEROV - 1story frame.
Haloal Hut
Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Jordan Mr. and Mrs, Dewey Bennett
Cal l 991·7085.
TWO homes for sale ; 1 m ile
3 bedrooms, bath . 6 rooms In
Dryers
9-14·6tc Nor lh of Eastern High all.
on Saturday evening.
Holiday, Florida; Mr. and Mrs:
Porches. Furnace Hea t
Surround·
clothes
For
Rent
or
Sale
School; both have bath and a (Gas). Good neighborhood.
Those attending a family Vern Peck and Mona Lee, and
with
gtntlt.
t~Jin
7'~&gt; ACRES ml&lt;ed hay ; C. B.
half ; 4 bedrooms: built·in Garage . Going at just
heat . No hot spots,
gathering at the home of Mr . Mr. and Mrs . Donald HOUSE at 1618 Lincoln Hts.,
5hahan,
Great
B
end
,
Ohio.
kllchens an d wa ll ·lo .wall $6,900.00.
Available alter Sepl. 25 ; 3
no overdrylnv ..
9·24-Jtp carpet ; call 985·3598.
and Mrs. Wayne Peck and Williamson and children, local.
F lne Mtsh Lint
b edrooms , laundry room,
Fil l er .
9·17-111c WE HAVE MANY OTHER
family recen!ly were Mrs. Lulu The group enjoyed home-made
family
room,
carport, 1.71 ACRE lot ; 1965 Fore LTO;
Wt Sptcllllzt In
PROPERTIES.
CALL
US
air
gas
furnace,
carWilliamson, Albany; Mrs. ice cream.
new 21 ri fle; phone 742·3656. 8 ROOM HOUSE, nke large lot, TODAY . TO BUY OR SELL
· MAYTAG
peting
In
kitchen,
bath,
Mr. and Mrs. Seth Huntley
Mabel Carney, Akron, Mr. and
9·24-21p natural gas, built-in ca binets LET US BE YOUR
bedroom
and
living
Mrs. Robert Peck, and Mr. and Vinton, were Sunday afternoo~
room; contact Rober I Beegle TRUMPE T and trombone ; in ki!chen . Close to radio BROKER .
stat ion in Bradbury . PhOne
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
949·2891.
Mrs. Ralph Davis and family, caller~ at the home of Mr. and
phone 992-5461.
991·2601.
REALTOR
9-14-Jtp
Mrs.
Reed
Jeffers.
,741-4211
Nelsonville; Mr . and Mrs.
9·24·3tc
9·14·121p
r Arnold Grate
-~--"--PHONE 992·2259

LIVESTOCK
. BUYER

WALNUTS

.........

-------

We talk to wou
like • ~.

$

WMP0/1390

Excelsior

Works, Inc.

to pounce on him in this action Friday night at Eastern.
Picture by Leo Hill.

Laird Bitter

3 AND 4 ROUM turn fshed a·rill

9-1511 tp

Success
Road
between
Tuppers Pl ai ns and l ong
Botlom . Open 6 days; some
eveni ngs . Phone 667 -3041,
Operator, Virglnia Hayman .

&amp; waxer wi th all aftachments,

.

9-22-6tc

LICENSED beautic ian . 1971
gradua te of Meigs High
Vocational School laguh t by
Mrs. Paul i'ne Hysel l; phone

electric 3 speed floor scrubber

size6' -8" x 2' -8", Sl5; cal l 'W2-

ROOM furnished apartment;

4

Business Services·

(1,000 BTU ), $15 ; 1 Kenmore

terior door with ha·rd ware,

For Rent

11 MEN needed, ful l lime. FURNI5HED 3 room apartPhone 446-0694. Monday and
ment, private en tr ance,
Tuesday.
carpeted ; phone 992-2780 or
9-24-1tc
991 3431.
9·14·ltc

991.6188.
INFORMATION

.

9·1a.61c

The Daily Sentinel

Employment Wanted

OPEN EVES. 8:00 I' .M.
•OMEROY, OHIO

4461770.

Clifton and

$1795

2-dt'or , local 1-owner, low mileage, good tires, clean inter ior. green finish, r adio. 2000cc, eng ine, . .4 speed .
1910 CAMA RO
$2295
Hardtop coupe, loca l low mileage. 1-owner car, 350 V-8
engine, 4 speed t ransmission, power steeri ng , (not teen age driven), green viny l bucket seats, console, rear air
deflector, sharp green f inish. radio. Sharp Is the word!

benefits. equal opportunity
emrloyer . Apply in person or ·
ca l Sears in _Gallipolis , Oh io

IN

Monte Carlo, local1 -owner ca r and less tha n 21,000 miles,
new white -wal l tires. factory air conditioned , aqua fini sh,
black viny l top, disc brakes. power steering, tur bohydramafic, radio, wheel covers, tru ly luxury and

PRI CE D TO 5UIT!
1911 PINTO FORD .

For Sale

TV technician . must be f)( - ? SETS metal kitchen cab inets,
perienced. good salary, good
$12 ; 1 Sears Wal l Gas Heater

1

- -- - - -

RUTLAND FURNITURE R~~~.~~=-··.

..

RANDY BORING (32) has left a Southern High Tornado
would-be l&lt;lckler on the turf behind in this bit of Friday night
action at Eastern . Southern won the game !Hl in an upset.
Picture by Leo Hill.

By
Press International
In the most harsh rhetoric of
the 1972 presidential campaign, Defense Secretary
Melvin R. Laird has accused
Sen. George S. .McGovern of
apparently acting ·•as an agent
of Hanoi " on the issue of
American prisoners of war.
The problem of the prisoners
flamed into prominence in the
contest between President Nix·
on and Democrat McGovern
Sunday when the South Dakota
senator accused Nixo n of
delaying the release of three
U.S. pilols in North Vietnam
for political reasons.
McGovern , appearing in
New York City, called on Nixon
"to let these three prisoners
come horne just as quickly as
possible."
North Vietnam 's news
agency announced that the
three pilots, who were released
with ceremony from prison
Sept. !1, had sent cables to
Nixon asking U.S. authorities
not to interfere with their
return home .
Laird immediately issued a
statement saying it was "a
despicable act of a presidential
candidate to make himself a
spokesman for the enemy ."
"Sen. McGovern apparently
is will ing to act as an agent for
Hanoi in undermining the
rights of American prisoners of
war under the Geneva con.
vention," Laird said.

The defense secretary said it
was the North Vietnamese who
have delayed the return of the
U.S. officers, Air Force Maj.
Edward Elias and Navy Lts.
Markham L. Gar tley and
Norris A. Charles .
Laird said th e U.S. government had had no communications from Hanoi about the
release, and he offe red to send
an American medical evacuation plane to Hanoi "within 24
hours', if there is a transportation problem.
Fra nk Mankiewicz, political

The largest freshman class
in the history of Holzer Medical
Center's School of Nursing
entered the . school today .
Forty-five full time and one
part time slude n~ are being
admitted, bringing the total
number of students enrolled in
the school to 102.
Miss Beren ice Skehan,
director of the sc hool of nur·
sing, sa id UJat she is very
pleased with the interest shown
by the incoming freshmen and
believes the Holzer Medical
Center School of Nursing will
contin ue to grow and maintain
high quality instruction.
. Entering today were : Mrs.
Geraldi ne Dunlap and Mrs.
Susan Smith, Poin t Pleasant:
director for the McGovern
campaign, said a poll taken by
the McGovern organization
showed the gap between the
candidates had narrowed, with
Nixon receiving 54 per cent and
McGovern 34 per cent with 10
per cen t undecided . He said
undecided voters were leaning
2-1 toward McGovern.
But a poll taken by Daniel
Yankelovich Inc. for Time
magazine and The New York
Times showed Nixon had increased his lead by 11 poinls
for a 62 to 23 per cent ad-

Mrs .
Shirley
Hodges, Connie Radford, Pomeroy;
Gallipolis; Mrs. Donna Rose Patricia Kinder, Northup ;
and Mrs. Mary Lou Stifner Rhea Dean, Athens; Susan
1th e part time student), Wiseman and Julia Rice,
Jackson ; and Mrs. Martha • Parkersburg; Nancy Tippens,
Wi lloc k, Athens; Rebecca Belpre, and Rhonda Merrow,
Stump, Ida Ma e Mills, Marietl&lt;l .
Margaret Ehman and Nancy
From the Portsmouth Lease, Gallipolis; Jo Ellen Ironton area are Kim Moses,
Burnett, Kanaug a; Dia ne Mamie McNeer, Nancy Lyon,
Bonecutter, Gallipolis Ferry;
Terry Daughtery and Linda
Lou Putney, Point Pleasant ;
Roxanne Wallis and Jill
Harris, Mason .
Susan Copley, Thurman ;
Joan Buck, Peggy Leach and
Sandra Terry , Jackson; Anna
The first nine students to
Jackson and Debra McCoy,
Oak Hill ; Connie Grueser and graduate from the Medical
Laboratory Te chnician
Program conducted jointly by
vantage. The Yankelovich Rio Grande College and Holzer
survey was based on in- Medical Center have passed
terviews with 2,239 registered th eir National Registry
voters in 16 key states between Examination.
The two-year program
Aug . 25 and Sept. 12. It also
in September, 1970 with
started
indicated Democratic voters
favor Nixon over McGovern 43 the firs t year consisting of
classroom work at Rio Grande
per cen t to 40 per cent.
College . The fo llowing year the
students co mpleted the
practical phase of the program
George McGovern is not at Holzer Medical Center's
my savior.
laboratory.
- Leslie Bacon, the 2U·year- After graduating last May ,
old Atherton. Calif.. anU· the nine students received an
war activist, at Miami Associate Degree from Rio
B eac h.

Judith McGo~ney and Peggy
.Saunders; Carla I;!urns,
Ashland·, Ky.; · Susan. SheetS,
Parma ~ Karen Sue Bmi.th and
.Jane Cochran, Chillicothe;
Kathy Ricke tts, columbus;
Janet Sieg le, Waterloo;
Deborah
Peters, · • · .New
Plymouth ; and Janei WoOdward , Waterford.

9 MLTP Students Pass

Registry Examinations
Grande and took the National
Registry Examination given
by the American Society of
Clinical Pathologists .
The examination scores have
been returned to Holzer
Medical Center and all nine
students passed, making them
all
registered
Medical
Laboratory Technicians.
Students
taking
the
exam in ation were ; Ca th y
Berry, Ga llipolis~ Jay Chose,
Jackson; Jani e Cobb, Pt.
Pleasant : Joyce Davis,
Nelsonville ; Teresa Dearth,
Nelsonville ; Cindy Howard,
Nelsonville; Marlene Johnson,
Pomeroy ; Jack Long, Albany;
and Vicki McCain, Oak Hill.

•

250,000 Ohioans Receiving

Built to last, b·eautifully.

EMK Dear Friend Letter
COLUMBUS (UP!)- An estim ated quarter-million
Ohioans are on the receiving
end of a four-page letter from
Sen . Edward M. Kennedy
Invoking the names of his
brothers on behalf of Sen.
Geor ge S. McGovern and
askin g for campaign contributions.
Richard Sklar, in charge of
McGovern's Ohio campaign,
said the "McGovern MillionMember Club" in Washington,
has sent about 200,1100 copies of
the letter into Ohio, culling
names from va rious mailing
lists.
In addition, 50,000 copies of
the letter are being circulated
within the state through the 23
congressional districts.
Kennedy's "Dear Friend"
letter, on his Senate st&lt;ltionery,
is accompanied by an application asking for $25
(Sponsor ), $10 (Friend), $5(1
(Patron ) or $100 (Angel).
There is another category
marked "Whatever you can
send."
, The appllcation notes the
contribution can be tax
deductible. Also included is a
self-addressed envelope with a
first-class postage penni!. II is
suggested on the back,
however, that a generous donor
would save the club eight cents
by attaching his own stamp.
"In the heat of the campsign," writes Sen. Kennedy,
every presidential election
always seems the most important in our history. I feel
that way about George
McGovern, just as I felt that
way about John Kennedy in

1960."
This election is important,
Kennedy explains, because
"our nation faces the greatest
crisis since the depths of the
Great Depression in 1932,
before Franklin Roosevelt took
command to give us new heart
and hope.
"This time the crisis is less
visible, more subtle, and therefore perhaps more dangerous
than In 1932," the senator
writes. "There .are no breadlines on tbe street, no appleJIIIleni to remind us dally of the
emergency we face. I.ndeed,
lbe superficial observations of
1 vllltor from abroad might be
1111t Ill Is well In the wealthiest
-lry ln the world.
·

"But beneath the deceptive
there is a slow, con~
stant, deadly erosion of the
national confidence and concern for each other that has
marked America as a great
civilization."
Kennedy places the blame
"squarely on the doorstep of
Richard Nixon," and goes on to
det&lt;lil what he calls failures of
the President to end the war
and reduce unemployment.
" These serious errors of
judgment by President Nixon
nakedly expose a characteristic of his leadership which
our nation can no longer afford
- his apparent indifference to
genuine moral and human
values," Kennedy writes .
" It was ind ifference to the
moral anguish of so many of
our people that cause him to
stay inside the While House
s urface~

and watch a football game
when hundreds of thousands
thronged to Washington to
protest his escalation of the
war. "
Kennedy cites what he calls
other instances of indifference
and
th en
describes
McGovern's ."quality of
caring."
He notes President Kennedy
named McGovern director of
food for Peace, and that McGovern worked with Roher!
Kennedy on a study of starvation and malnutrition.
Then comes a prediction that
McGovern can upset Nixon.
Last comes the pitch for
money.
"Whether you can only give
$5 or can afford $1,1100, you can
play a part in this historic
opportunity. Won't you join us
in th is great endeavor'"

AUTHORIZED DEALERS

~}CHRYSLER
"""" MOTORS CORPORATION

Pilots Prefening
Civilian Company
TOKYO (UPI)- Three U.S.
pilots freed from prison in
North VIetnam do not want to
fly home with American
military escorts, th e Vietnam
News Agency said today.
A VN A news dispatch from
Hanoi monitored in Tokyo said
that the pilots sent separate
cables to President Nixon
Saturday requestil\g that U.S.
authorities refrain from Interfering with their trip home.
The pilots were Maj. Edward
K. Elias, of Valdosta, Ga.,
Navy Lt. (Jg) Markham L.
Gartley of Dunedin, Fla., and
Navy Lt. (jg ) Norris A. Charles
of San Diego, Calif. They were
re leased May 17 to the
American antiwar group now
on a visit to North Vietnam.
ln Washington, Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird accused Hanoi of making ''propaganda tools" of the pilots and
their rela~ves In the North
Vietnamese capital. Noting
that North Vietnamese officials three weeks ago
promised to release the three
pilots, Laird said the Communists were stU! making the
men ''pllrade around" Hanoi
and "they are even llling the

families of these prisoners of
war as propaganda tools at this
particular time."
The American group had
been expected to leave Hanoi
Saturday on a flight bound for
Vientiane, but they were not on
the plane when it landed. U.S.
antiwar activists with the
group said . North Vietnam
chose a different route, apparently
fearing
U.S.
authorities In Laos would try to
''kidnap" the fliers.
The VNA said that the pilots
in their cables assured their
families and President Nixon
of "tbelr good health and good
spirits and their desired intention to be accompanied,
without interference, by their
civilian escorts, including the
Rev. WiJUam Sloan Coffin Jr.,
Prof. Richard Falk, David
Dtillinger and Cora Weiss."
It was not known when the
pilols planned to leave Hanoi
for tbe United States but Elias
said in a cable to his wife in
Georgis that he might return
home "possibly Thursday."
Charles' wife, Olga, and
Gartley's mother, Minnie Lee
Gartley, are with the pilots in
Hanoi.

CHRYSLER

Plymoutfi

THAT·'S THE JOY OF IT
TOM RUE Mo·rORS
399 SOUTH 3rd AVE.

MIDDI.fPORT, 0.

•

••

Rutland '·

I

I

)

l

\

�.,

Largest Freshman Class, 45,
Arrives For Nurses Training

tt.:_ l'he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Sept. 25,1972

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
Wanted

Help Wanted

Poineroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGIIS
Of
QUALITY
1970 CHEVROLET

.

'

CARRIERS
WANTED

52895

Pomeroy ·Motor Co•.

Hartford, W. Va.
PHONE 992-215~

Notice

WAN•T· ADS..

KOSCOT KOSMETIC5 and

, , DEADI.INES

wigs, more new prod u,cts
comi ng soo n. For free1
demonstration, phone 992 -

i P .M. Day Before Publicat iorf.
Monday Deadl i ne 9 a .m .

Cance llat ion - Correc ti ons
Wilt be accepted un t il 9 a .m. for .

REGULATION 5

5113 .

for more than one incorre c1
insert ion .

' R-ATES

tFor Wan, Ad ser vice
5 cents per Word one in ser!Jon
Minimum Cha rg e 75c
12 cen ls per word th r ee
~ onsecut ive insertioris.
18 cen ts per 'word s~ con•
iecu t ive Insert ions. ,
25 Per Cent Disc ount on paid
ads and 11ds paid within 10 da ys.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

$1.50 for 50 word m inimum .
Ea ch additional word 2c .
BLIND ADS

Additional 25c Chafg e per
Adver1isement .
~8 : 30a . m,.

HOU11 ~

WANTED
CHIPWOOD

' - - - " - ; - - - " - ' - -~'1

.

The' Publis her reserves th e :
I~Jhf to ed it or reject any ads
deemed
obiecliOn!ll.
The.
publ isher wil l not be respons l bl~'

OFFJC£

Wanted

8·17-tfc

Day of PUb l icat ion

tQ S:OO,p .m, Da ily_
8 : 30 a . m . to 12 : 00 1\l oo r
Saturday .

"HEll'.

Poles
Muimom
Diameter
10" Ill

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

WindOio''
Air Condilioro~rs
Hot Waler Healers
Plumbing
Elec trical Work

urges! End

'6.00 Per Ton
DELIVERED

ARNOLD
BROlHERS

TO

OHIO
PAU.£T CO.

992 ·2448
. 'Omeroy, 0.

Carpenter
News, Event

phone 991.3658.

On Old Rl 33
Phoile 992-2689

WIL L give away kittens. Cal l
992-5247 or see at 1165 Vine
St ree t, Middleport .

Pamerur. Ohio

9-19.61c
VIRG IN lA's Beauty Sa lon on

FURNI SHED 3-room house and
bath, adults on ly. Phone 992 -

$10 ; 1 end tables, S10 ; I
bathrnom chrome towel pole,
$3; 1 finished, like new in-

1413.

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
'5.55

.

9.14·3tp
APPLES.

Filzpalr~ck

9·21·11&lt;

Or-

char ds, State Route 689 .
Phone Wi lkesvi ll e 669-3785.

Park view Kennels, Phone 992-.

, I
8-15·lfc l

------=--

STE RE O-rocker console. 4
speed intermixed changer ,
dual vo l ume con tr ol, 4
apartments.
•t spe~ker soun d system,
4-11.flct beautiful hand rubbed Walnut
tin i.sh . Ba lance $66 .3.4 . Use our

the

· Nathan Biggs

- GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

POODL'E puppies, · 51 1ver · toy·,
5443.

From th e largest
Bulldozer Radiator to
Small est Heater Core.

On Most American Cars

8·30-fl c

5591.

Radi.;ttor Specialist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Ph: 992·2 114

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
OpenS TiiS
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy , 0 .

Pomeroy

eROOFING
•HEATING ·
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
•SPOUTING
•P AINTING . .
For Free fs!jmate · .

BilL OSBORNE, Eastern High halfback, is on a sweep
at his own left end but Southern's big Nick !hie (34) is ready

·PHONE ~92:2550

unfurAished
0

hone 991-5434.

DOZER and back hoe work , WILL · CUT or trim trees.
r easonable ; also clean out
base ments,
att ics
and
cel lar s; phone 949-322 1.

ponds an d septic tanks , ditching service; top soil, ti l l
di rt , l im estone; B&amp;K Excavati ng . Phone 992-5367.

budget lerm s. Call 99U085.
8-19-JOtc
9-24-6tc
Dick Karr. Jr .
furnished, 408 Spring Ave .. - - - - -- - -- 9-l-Ife o· tiELL WHEEL alignment
Pomeroy .
located at Crossroads. RI. 124.
8·10·1fc
BAC KHOE AND DOZER work· Complete front end ser¥1ce,
HOUSEHOLD AUCTION
Septic tanks insta lled . Georca
tune up and brake service .
TRAILER . Brown 's Trai l er THE personal properly of R. B.
(.Bit
II
Pullins.
Phone
991-1 47~.
Wheels balanced elecSa
yre
wil
l
be
sold
at
his
Court , Min ersv i l l e. Ohio ;
troni ca lly .
All
work.
4·15.tfc
r esidence located across from
phone 992-3324.
3 ROOM

apartment ,

un ·

9 19 6tc

Rl . 33. SATURDAY, Sepl. 30,
1971. 10:30 A.M. CURV~D
GLASS CHIN A CUPBOARD

For Sale
6

TIRES 7·14•5 and 3 standard
!ires ; wheel s and axles fr om
mobi le home ; ph one 992 38 I B.

9·113fc
CAST iron bath tub. lavatory
an d commode ; all with fi t
lings, good co nditi on ; phone

992 3196 or 992-1111.

9

11-Jic

FOR YOUR health 's sake ea t
organically grown toma toes;
B. Qu isenber ry has large
ones, lOc pound all he old Post
Offi ce building . Syracuse ,
Ohi o.

9J7.J1tp
16'

CAMPING

United M e th odist Chu r ch,
New Haven, West Va . on Sta te

TRA ILER ,

Sha sta. l ike new. Phone 985 ·

3849 .

9·7·301c
1911 KAWASAKI 100 excellenl
condit ion . Rea dy to go ,
sacrifice f or only $285 .
Coolvill e 667-6214 .

Glass door China Cup .
board , Goot us Glass Plate ,
Northwood Green Carnival
Dish, Warw ick China, Water
Lao Pottery , Nort hwood
Vase , Czechos lovak Vas e,
Two Glass Standing Bears,
Be ll Glass Bow l , Wh ile
Marked Carni val di sh with
Grape Band, Depres sion
Glass
Cream
Pitch er,
Depression Glass Bow ls and
Candy Di sh, Tulip Pitcher,
Pigeon Blood Goblets and
di shes, Depre ssion Glass
Candy dish , Bava ir Plate .
Hobart Berry Set. Two McCoy
Vases. Pressed Glass, Dai sy

Creamer
&amp; Sugar,
48 Sal
Harts,p
Beer Glasses,
Ma ster
Drop Leaf Table, Severa l
Lamps , Hobart Clock , Mantel

Clock MU ZZLE LOAD ING
RIFLE, IVER JOHNSON
PISTOL CO IN &gt; - Indian
Head Penn ies. 1832-33 Half
Do l lar s, Silve r Quar ters,
Si lver Dimes , TW02 112 Dollar
GOLD
Pie c es,
Buffalo
Nickels. Qu ilts Flowe r
Garden , Bird, Endless Chain .
Neck Tie, Pudd in' &amp; Pie.

l&lt;EAPY ·MI X
dell v~re d

guaranteed .
rates. Pho ne

CONCRETE

99n113.

right to ')'Our
project . Fast and easy . Free
estimates. Phone 992· 3284-,.
Goeg l ein Ready-Mi x Co .,

Middleport, Ohio.

RP-.o:,...n-.hl ... .
742 -3232 or

EARTH MOVING
Dozer &amp; End loader work, ·
ponds, basement, · - ~~~d~
scaping. W_e · have· 2 ;-SI~~
dozers, 2 size load.ers. · Wor~
done by hour · or (O(IJ~ad:
Free Estimates. We _-also
haul fill dirt, top soil. Dump
tru(ks and low-boY tor hii-e.

·

See Bob or Roger Jeffers,

Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525

/.u .nc · after

1

p.m. or phone 992·

5232.

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?
L os t
your
operator's li cense? Ca U 992--

1966.

6-30-lfc

6·15-tfc

R. E. TRACY, 5r . Dislribulor,
Fire and Satety Equ ipmen t
Since 1942 . 125 M echanic
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. Sales
and Service. Phone 992-2804 or

SEPTIC TA NKS CLEfiNED
REA50NAB LE rates. Ph . 446- SE PTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
9915146.
.
Sanitati on, Stewart, Ohio. Pn.
4781. Gal lipolis. John Russel l,
9-12·3lc
662·3035.
Owner &amp; Operator .
1·11.tfc 'SeWING MACHI!OES. Repair
.
.
f12 ·tfC
- -- -- - - -- service, all makes. 991-1184.
The Fabric 5hop, Pomeroy.
C. BRA DFORD. Auctioneer
Real Estate For Sale
Complete Service
Authorized 5inger &gt;ales and
Phone 949-3821
NEW al l electric home by
~erv l ce . We Sharpen Scissors.
Rac i n e~", Ohio
ow ner . J bedr ooms, 2 baths,
. 3·!9·tfC
'Cr i tf Bradford
fireplace, carpet, near Meigs
5·1·1fc High School , $25,000 f irm . Sio E US F'6R : &gt;&lt;w nmgs, ~)orh\
doors and windows, carports,
Phone 991.3183.

-=:. : ======:_,
9-15-12fc

te:_£F~orr_S~a~l~e__
rFR~e~a~l~E~s~ta~

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. ·Broker

marquees, ~luminum 'Siding
and rail ing. ~A. Jacob. sales
representative . For free;
estima tes, ··phone Charlu
Lisle, Syrac use , V . V.
Johnson and Son, Inc. •

3·2·tf•

110 Mechanic Street

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
WORKING MAN 'S SPECIAL
POMEROY - Large 8 room house with 5 bedrooms, bath ,
and nice k itchen . Front and ba ck porches. Full basement.

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF

APPOINTMENT

Case No . l07S4
Estale of JA NIE ELIZABETH
SNID ER . Deceased .
Notice is her eby given that
Carolyn Janet Reeves , Of
Pomeroy , Oh io, has been duly
a ppo inted Exe c utrix of the
Estate of Jan ie Eliza beth
Snider . dece11sed . lat e ol Meigs
Counly . Oh io.
Creditors are req uired to f ile
lh ei r cla ims with such fudiciary
within four monthS .
Dat ed thiS 13th day Of S~ p ­
l ember , 197 2.
Men nlno D. W~bsttr
Judge
ColJrt of Common Pleas.
Probal e Pi vis ion

Only $7,500.00.
Be dsprea d s. Sheets ,
Margie Jeffers, along with
. Li mestone, ExcelsiOr
Business Opportunities COAL
Blankets
,
Pi
ll
ow
Cases
.
MIDDLEPORT
Pam Grow and Nancy Meyers
5alt Works, E. Main &gt;t ..
Crosley T .V. , Kenmor e Fuel
3 BEDROOMS - Ni ce kitchen, breakfast nook , uti l ily
Pomeroy,
Phone
992-389
1.
of the Jackson area spent
Hea ter , Carved Ba ck
room . carpeting and paneling . Old fashion bath . Concrete
4-11·1fc Oil
9-JOOic
Rocker , Cher ry Bed &amp;
severa l days vacationing in
TRAIN TO BE A
front porch . Nice yard .
· -- - - - Dresse r , Couch Occ. Chair ,
Florida . They visited points of
LARGE HOME
1970 TRAVELMATE Camper,
Unusual Tree Base Lam p
PLU S - A large one story building 40x70 . Jl,.,. acres of
in terest includin g Disney Help Wanted
model Safari. $1,400 ; phone
Stand, Stone Ja r s, Wa sh
level land . 4 bedroom home, Ph baths, modern kitchen ,
991.5491.
Tubs. Gen . Elec1ric Ref .,
World, Cy press Gardens, WAITRE5SE5. full and partwa
ll to wal l carpeting. Ask ing only $13,000.00.
9-2J.6lc
Elect. Hotpoint Stove , Picno
ex per ience
Daytona Beach .an&lt;l, Cape time ;
COUNTRY HOME
hJres, Gas Cook St ove .
nigh_t shltt; apply
Kennedy and went deep sea necessary;
2
BEDROOMS
Bath,
enclosed porch , garage. Level Lot
WIN
CHE
&gt;TER
Model
11,
1
1
WAGON &gt;EAT. Be"c h Vise,
in per~J1f} Blue Tartan .
Plains wa ter. Only $4.000 .00.
fishing,
'•
gauge
shotg
un,
modif
ied,
hammer
s,
saws,
Wrecking
9·19·6tc
3BEDROOMS
$175; Warm Morn ing coal
Bars , Wren ches, Bol ts. Hand
Mr. Jess F. McGrady of - - - - -ROUT E 338 - An older home that can be r enovated into a
burner, good conditi on, $30 ;
191 18. 15 1101 1. 3tc
Tools,
Shoe
La
sl.
Oval
Top
Rockbridge, was Gideon BABY5 1TT ER in my home, 1
HIGH PAYING
phone (}92-5044 .
comfortable place . Has a large lot. Give us a good offer.
Trunk, Deer Horn , Hat Ra ck
ch ild , must have r eferences ;
speaker at the Temple United
WHAT A DEAL
9·24-3lp and
OPPORTUNITIES
large
No.
of
phone 992-3489 after 3: 30p .m.
NOTICE OF
Miscellaneous
Items.
AUCT.
3
BEDROOMS
Modern home, bath, fireplac e
Methodist Church on Sunday.
Learn to buy cantt, hogs and
APPOINTMENT
9-1111tc
1
967
FORD
truck
,
FIOO,
Mr . Sayre is
( modern). and 4 room block bu ilding for a bus iness on Rt .
NOTE shtap . Wt prefer to train
Ca se No . 20 ,712
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wetnall,
Reyno lds 71 n 12 dump ,
di scon tinuing
housekeeping
men
with
llftllock
exptrl·
7
business loop. Ask ing on ly 525.000.00 lor both .
Es tate of Will iam R. Ba iley
Columbus, were weekend HAVE i mmediate open ing for
Cheste r axl e, new t ir es. A-1
enu. For loeal lnttNitw,
Dece&lt;"sod .
and is selling al l the above
165 ACRES
l ime office girl ; typing
writt age , phone, addrns &amp;
con dition . Phone 614-887 -2165.
Notice Is hereby gillen that
that he has used and ac .
guests of Mr. and Mrs. William part
1
HO
US
E&gt;
Plenty
of
pasture
and
hunl
ing
land
.
Al
l
essential. shorthand helpful
background to:
Clarence R. Bailey of 119
9.1J.Jtp
cumulated in past 70 year s.
M inera ls . 2 houses, 3 spring s. 4 farm ponds . Several
Miller and daughters.
but not required ; Write Box
Seever . Spr ingf ield , has been
There are many nice old
NAnONAL MEAT PACKERS
build ings. Good gravel road, sc hool and mai l route s.
du ly appoin ted Admin istrator
The Busy Bee Society of the 729·A. C·OThe Daily Senti nel,
ant
ique
items
and
have
been
lliAINING
97 ACRES
Wilh the Will Annexed of the
Pomer oy, Ohio 45769, giv ing
Carpenter Baptist Church met
we l l cared f or . TERMS :
3435 Broodway
Es tate of Wi lliam R. Blliley ,
EASTERN
SCHOOL
DI
STRICT
Hil
l
!arm
for
beef
full resum e wi th r efer ences.
SOME SAY DISCOUNT!
CASH. NOT RESPDNSIBLE
Kan111 City, Mo. 64111
decettsed , lale of M iddleport,
at the church with Bonnie
cattle . 8 room modest home , with modern bath , furna ce
previous employment, and
We Say It's Our
FOR ACC IDENTS. OWN ER •
Meigs County , Ohio.
!raining .
and semi -modern kitchen. 40 acres of meadow . A ll
Cheadle as devotional leader.
ATTN : Dept. No. OH·41
R.
B.
Sayre
.
BRADFORD
Cre dilor s 11re r eqlJired lo file
mine rals. NOW ONLY $19,500.00.
9·3·ffC
Others present were Metta
SLACKS
their claims with uid f idu ci ary
AUCT ION CO., Ra cine, Ohio.
CALL AND HAVE A LOOK AT ONE OF THESE . 50ME
wi thin four months .
Ph 949·3811 or 3161. Lunch
Fisher, Anna Lich, Vivian ATTE NTION LADIES-Sell Wanteli To Buy
Dated. lh ls 1 ~ 1 h day of Sep .
ARE A REAL BARGAIN, OTHERS AGOO D BUY. THEN
SPECIAL
wil l be se rved by New Haven
!ember 1972 .
Gaston, Emma Whittington,
Toys &amp; Gif t s now thru
LI
ST
WITH
US
FOR
BE5T
RE5UL
T&gt;
.
Fir emen .
Manning o . Webster
December with the oldes t Toy GA LLI POLl&gt; 'resident wants to
Buy 2 Pairs and
f'rcda Smith, Ida Cheadle and
9-24 -21c
buy
a
·business.
Will
buy
Ju dge of
Party Plan In the Country .
HELEN
L.
TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATE
Lynn McWhorter.
992·3325
business and property or
Get! PAIR FREE
Meigs County
High est commissions, No
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
Common Pleas Cour t
i ness with lea se. Ca ll
Mrs. Goldie Gillogly has
Cash Outlay . Ca ll or wrlle bus
All kinds, all sizes for m en,
Probate Dill is ion
Gal
lipolis
446-4.408
,
Mobile
Homes
For
Sale
"
Santa'
s
Parties",
Avon
Ct
.
women. young men, boys
returned from a vacation trip
(9 ) 18, 25 1101 2. 31
5
ROOM)
&amp;
bath,
1
story
block.
9-10·11tc
0600 1. Tel. I (103) 673-3455.
5 ROOM hou se t or sale. one
and girls. Hurry to
10 x 55 EXPANDO. 1 bedroom ,
to Florida. She accompanied
house ; gas for ced air furnace.
ALSO BOOKING PARTIES.
third acre gr ound, f ront
laun
dr
y
room,
$2,800
;
phone
POMEROY
11.,. acre lot , Rt . 7 &amp; Old Chester
ORDINANCE TO
her brother ·and sister-in-law,
porch , fu l l ba se men!, S. D.
9-J-lfc OLD Furnllure: oak tables.
741·4406.
Rd . · $5,5011 ; phone 991-3874. Buskirk . 341 Page 51, Mid·
VACATE STREET
"·
_
Jack
W
.
Ca
rsey
,
Mgr
.
Mr. and Mrs. T, R. Boring,
9·n3Jp
org ans, di shes. Clocks, brass
To vaca te 20 teet alley, from
8·19.tic
dl eport.
WANTED, Toy Coun . beds. or complete households. alii Phone 992·2181
Ea st Ma in Street to Cliffs.
McArthur. and another sister- HELP
selors . Santa Claus JUSt told
9·10tp
Whereas , on lhe 17 th dav of
Write M. D. Miller, Rt . 4,
in-law, Mrs. Fermin Boring.
1970 3 BEDROOM Iota I electri c, OUT OF STATE . IDEAL 5·
me, something to te ll you .
July , 191 2, a pet ilion by persons
Pomeroy, Ohio. 'Call 991·6171.
ACRE RANCH. Lake Con - 5 ROOM house. double garage, owning lots in lhe immed iate
x 60. with expa.ndo liv ing
They were guests of a brother- He is very busy, this Chnstmas
6-18-ltc ' JU 5T TAKEN IN , Si ng er r12oom
cha s, New Mexi co. $2975 . No
and
bed
r
oom,
excel
len
I
'72
:
double lo t, Anderson Str eet, v lclnlly of a 20 feet alley , lyino
Sewing Machine . Will se ll for
in·lm.l and sister, Mr. and Mrs.
down . No inleresl. $25 per mo .
condition, pri ce $7,000 ; for
Ma son, W. Va ., phone 1-304- between lots 240 and 241 and
So join our Playhouse Par ty
sma
ll
ba
lance
of
$36
.21
or
for
119 mos . Vacat ion
le ad ing from East M ain Street ,
James Bethel in Lakeland, and
mor
e
informat
ion
ca
ll
West
713·5606.
gang;
payments may be arranged.
th rougl1 sai d lots toward the
rad
i
se
.
Free
Bro
chur
e
.
Pa
Jeffer5on, 0 . 879 -759J .
visited many points of interest. Earn money and Gree n Stamps,
9·1Hfc cl iff beh ind said lots , wa s du l'l'
Phone 991-533 1.
Ran chos Lake Conha s: Box
too
;
9-176tc
to council praying
9·7·ttc
A wiener roast was held in
1001 DO. Alameda, California BY OWNER • price red uced for presented
Bring Your Unhulled
---Give Santa Claus a helping
thai sai d alley , between th e
94501.
the Temple Church Grove by
hand.
sale; ow ner leav ing points named, be vl!lca l ed : and
8 TRACK 5TEREO. fre ight r - - - - - -- - -""1
8-19·30tp quick
Mr . and Mrs . Arthur Crabtree Thi s Christmas ' 72 .
state ; Jbedroom house. liv ing nol ice ot tne pendancy and
damaged. in beautiful walnut
·Air Conditioners
r oom , din ing room, kitchen pl'" ayer of said pelit lon has been
console. Will se ll for SI01.50or
and Don Comer for the youth of CA LL Margaret Fortune, 949·
541 4 or Barbara Lam bert,
and bath , full basement , gas given as required bV law by
pay SUO per week . Phone 991·
•Awnings
publ icat ion in lhe Sen tinel , a
th e co mmun ity on Sunday
446;3411 .
fu rnace, Chester water , on newspa per of general cir .
5331.
·•
UndPrpinning
evening. Those attending ingood blacktop road ; small culation In lhe co,-poralion for
9-Jo.ftc
9·7·tfc
CLELAND REALTY
ba rn and fi sh pond ; phone 843· six co nse cut ive weeks ending
cluded Vicky and Bruce - - - - - TO OUR
mobi le home
608 E. Ma in St .
1194.
Augvsl 28th. 1972, and,
FOUR beaulitul songs by John 'Complete
Gillogly, Debbie and Laurie Notice
MECHANICAL
service ...... plu s g igantic
Whereas . Counc i l , upon
Pomeroy
9·14-6lc
Mohl
er
on
.45
r
.p.m.
Act
ion
hearing is sat isfied thai there Is
Miller, Shelia Wooten, Cheryl
HULLER
'dispfay
of
mobile
homes
'
·992·2259
Records No. ACt043A. (C&amp;W ) a lway s available at .. .
safe and fasl with
good ca use for such vacat ion as
Lawson, Mark Gillogly, Bryan REDUCE
" Rainbow
Valley "
a nd
HOUSE in Long goftom , ph9n~: prayed tor , that It wil l not be
Gobese lablets and E·Vap
..
and Keith J orda n, Greg
" Snowballs in the Rockies";
detr im ental to th e general in ·
985-3519.
" water pill s," Nelson Drug .
MILLER
Your Walnuts will be
POMEROY - Over 5 acres .
l er es l , ill"'a ought to be ma de ,
!S acred) " Our Lord God
6·11 -ttc now
Blanton, Jeffrey and Alesa
9·25-1tp
therefore ,
1
balhs.
Din
ing
18&lt;12.
Livi
ng
Physician
"
and
"God
'
s
Sweet
Hulled Free of Charge
Gillogly, Russell and Kevin
It Ordain ed by lhe Counci l
Be
MOBILE
HOMES
27x30,
firep
lace
.
Kitchen
has
Love .'' Specia I! Pick up your
of the Vil lage of Pomeroy, State
and We Will Pay You.
Stainl
ess
Steel
ran
ge.
oven
,
Crabtree, Richard and Vicky For Sale
record ing now at Bill &amp; Lee's
1220 Washington Blvd.
Of Ohio,
•
sink , dishwasher, all built-in .
Music Center at BRW Ha rd- &lt;23·7521
Comer and Kathy Massey .
BELPRE,
D.
Section 1: That the 20 feet
3 YOUNG male Beegle dogs and
17ft. of base cabinets, 10 11.
ware Bldg., Pomeroy , Ohio ;
alley , ly ing between lots 2-40 and
Mrs. Murl Ga lawa y enI registere d blue flck coon
1
.
'
l
.,
of upper . Full basement with
only suo, save 50c.
241. from Main slreet to the cl iff
Per Hundred
dog . Phone 949.4761.
terta in ed members of th e
large Rec . room . fireplace .
be and the same is hereby
_
_
__
_
_
_
_
9._
1
4-6tc
'cAStj
paid
for
all
ma~es
ana
Pounds
va cated .
Utility room . 2 car garage .
Temple Church W.S.C.S. for
mode l s of mobile homes .· $35,000 .00.
Sec t ion 2: Tha tlh is ord inan ce
YARD SA LE . 6 mi. E. of ·phone area code 614•41J.95J.r.
their Se ptembe r meeting.
be and rema in In force from and
After
they
Real Estate Fo; Sale
Chester on Rt . 148; Ella
4-13·ff&lt;
after the earlies t period allowed
Election of officers was held .
MIDDLEPORT
~
are Hulled
Hannum , phone 98 5-335.4 ;
1
by ta w .
bedrooms, Ma ste r
has
Mrs . Arth ur Crabtre e, 1 ROOM house and 1 acre of
Sept. 18, :19-and 30th ; Walnut ··A t "ale. S
land , localed on Portlahd·
lavatory
and
conso le
bedroom
suite.
S40
;
Wine
U
0
lol
COU NCIL OF VILLAGE
president: Mrs. William
Ba shan Road . Can be seen by
dressing lable,all have large
OF POMEROY
living
room
suite,
$10
;
Tap.
1
970
PONTIAC
GTO,
4
speed
;
Miller, vice-pres.; Mrs. Donald
appoin t ment. See George
Slar1 Buying October 2. 1912.
closets . Bath has ceramic
Do nald Collins
pan
gas
rang
e
•.
$15
;
breakfast
cal
l
7
1.3977.
4
Holler at Miner svi lle, Ohio.
President of Council
tile /
shower ,
console
Comer, secreta ry ; and Mrs.
sel. S15 : goss1p ben ch, SIO;
Atlest :
9.nJtc lavat ory and olher features .
9·25·6f'c
T .V. ta bl e, $10 ; Maytag
Robert Mattox, treasurer,
Jan e Walton
1Jrt
YOUR
DIAL
Living
12&lt;20.
Kitchen
has
15
washer, $25 ; G. E. Dryer,
Clerk
were those selected.
tt.
ba
se,
15
ft
.
upper
150
1
Auto
Sales
'1ronmg
E. ironer
, s o; Real Estate For Sale
; G.board,
cabinets , built -in range,
Prayer and hymn singing
S5 ; Com ·191 18 , 15, 1Jc
1970
VOLK
5WAGEN,
good
pressor, SlO ; f _
a rm wagon - 2 RACINE 10 room house ; I oven, disposa l and air
were enjoyed by the group and
cond•t •on, new pain l , cal l
conditione r. Uti lity . Car.
Sa~
beds, S50 ; wmdow fan. $5 ; bath , basement, garage two
the hostess served delicious
after 6 p.m. 991.3401.
peled throughout. Gas F.A.
Big CapacJty
canis ter sweeper , $40 ; sew ing -iols . Phone 949·4313 .
refre shm en ts. Plans were
9·2H tp
Moy111
furnace . Carport and patio.
ma chine.
S75;
other
H ·lfp
P. 0. Box 267
992-3891
Autom1t1cs
$18,500.00.
hou se hold Items .
made for attendance at the
2 speed operation.
Pomeroy, Ohio
9-10lp PT PLEASANT - 6 room
District meeting in Nelsonville. Nathan Brady, Ashland, 0 .;
Cho ice of wattr
MIDDLEPORT - 2 story
house, l112 baths, r ecreation
temps .
Au1 o.
Mr. and Mrs . T. J. Spurlock, Mr . and Mrs. Garland Brady,
frame , S larg e bedrooms
MAPLE Stereo -radio com .
wat:er ·
level
r oom , new built -in kitchen ,
W.C.
l'h
baths
.
Cellar
.
Albany; Mr. and Mrs. Reed Athens; Mr . and Mrs. Donald
control .
L lnt
GE NSENG. S50 lb. Beef hide bination, AM-FM radio, 4 must sell, leaving town . Day s Garage . Ca rport. Nice
Jeffers and Mr. and Mrs. Sl&lt;lrks and daughters, Mann,
speaker
sound
system
,
4
F
liter
or
Power
phone
992
·3502.
evenings
$3 .50 each . Maran Fure
kitchen . Close to shopping
Fin Agitator . ·
Arthur Crabtree enjoyed a W. Va .; Mr. and Mrs. Edwin
House, Mason, W. Va . 773- speed automa tic changer, phone 675.2371.
and
playground. $12.800.
Ptrmi· Prtn
separa~
controls
.
Belance
5296.
8·JO.tfc
potluck supper at the home of Peck and Denver , Amesville;
Moytog
S78.19.
Use
our
budget
terms.
9-10·3tc
POMEROV - 1story frame.
Haloal Hut
Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Jordan Mr. and Mrs, Dewey Bennett
Cal l 991·7085.
TWO homes for sale ; 1 m ile
3 bedrooms, bath . 6 rooms In
Dryers
9-14·6tc Nor lh of Eastern High all.
on Saturday evening.
Holiday, Florida; Mr. and Mrs:
Porches. Furnace Hea t
Surround·
clothes
For
Rent
or
Sale
School; both have bath and a (Gas). Good neighborhood.
Those attending a family Vern Peck and Mona Lee, and
with
gtntlt.
t~Jin
7'~&gt; ACRES ml&lt;ed hay ; C. B.
half ; 4 bedrooms: built·in Garage . Going at just
heat . No hot spots,
gathering at the home of Mr . Mr. and Mrs . Donald HOUSE at 1618 Lincoln Hts.,
5hahan,
Great
B
end
,
Ohio.
kllchens an d wa ll ·lo .wall $6,900.00.
Available alter Sepl. 25 ; 3
no overdrylnv ..
9·24-Jtp carpet ; call 985·3598.
and Mrs. Wayne Peck and Williamson and children, local.
F lne Mtsh Lint
b edrooms , laundry room,
Fil l er .
9·17-111c WE HAVE MANY OTHER
family recen!ly were Mrs. Lulu The group enjoyed home-made
family
room,
carport, 1.71 ACRE lot ; 1965 Fore LTO;
Wt Sptcllllzt In
PROPERTIES.
CALL
US
air
gas
furnace,
carWilliamson, Albany; Mrs. ice cream.
new 21 ri fle; phone 742·3656. 8 ROOM HOUSE, nke large lot, TODAY . TO BUY OR SELL
· MAYTAG
peting
In
kitchen,
bath,
Mr. and Mrs. Seth Huntley
Mabel Carney, Akron, Mr. and
9·24-21p natural gas, built-in ca binets LET US BE YOUR
bedroom
and
living
Mrs. Robert Peck, and Mr. and Vinton, were Sunday afternoo~
room; contact Rober I Beegle TRUMPE T and trombone ; in ki!chen . Close to radio BROKER .
stat ion in Bradbury . PhOne
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
949·2891.
Mrs. Ralph Davis and family, caller~ at the home of Mr. and
phone 992-5461.
991·2601.
REALTOR
9-14-Jtp
Mrs.
Reed
Jeffers.
,741-4211
Nelsonville; Mr . and Mrs.
9·24·3tc
9·14·121p
r Arnold Grate
-~--"--PHONE 992·2259

LIVESTOCK
. BUYER

WALNUTS

.........

-------

We talk to wou
like • ~.

$

WMP0/1390

Excelsior

Works, Inc.

to pounce on him in this action Friday night at Eastern.
Picture by Leo Hill.

Laird Bitter

3 AND 4 ROUM turn fshed a·rill

9-1511 tp

Success
Road
between
Tuppers Pl ai ns and l ong
Botlom . Open 6 days; some
eveni ngs . Phone 667 -3041,
Operator, Virglnia Hayman .

&amp; waxer wi th all aftachments,

.

9-22-6tc

LICENSED beautic ian . 1971
gradua te of Meigs High
Vocational School laguh t by
Mrs. Paul i'ne Hysel l; phone

electric 3 speed floor scrubber

size6' -8" x 2' -8", Sl5; cal l 'W2-

ROOM furnished apartment;

4

Business Services·

(1,000 BTU ), $15 ; 1 Kenmore

terior door with ha·rd ware,

For Rent

11 MEN needed, ful l lime. FURNI5HED 3 room apartPhone 446-0694. Monday and
ment, private en tr ance,
Tuesday.
carpeted ; phone 992-2780 or
9-24-1tc
991 3431.
9·14·ltc

991.6188.
INFORMATION

.

9·1a.61c

The Daily Sentinel

Employment Wanted

OPEN EVES. 8:00 I' .M.
•OMEROY, OHIO

4461770.

Clifton and

$1795

2-dt'or , local 1-owner, low mileage, good tires, clean inter ior. green finish, r adio. 2000cc, eng ine, . .4 speed .
1910 CAMA RO
$2295
Hardtop coupe, loca l low mileage. 1-owner car, 350 V-8
engine, 4 speed t ransmission, power steeri ng , (not teen age driven), green viny l bucket seats, console, rear air
deflector, sharp green f inish. radio. Sharp Is the word!

benefits. equal opportunity
emrloyer . Apply in person or ·
ca l Sears in _Gallipolis , Oh io

IN

Monte Carlo, local1 -owner ca r and less tha n 21,000 miles,
new white -wal l tires. factory air conditioned , aqua fini sh,
black viny l top, disc brakes. power steering, tur bohydramafic, radio, wheel covers, tru ly luxury and

PRI CE D TO 5UIT!
1911 PINTO FORD .

For Sale

TV technician . must be f)( - ? SETS metal kitchen cab inets,
perienced. good salary, good
$12 ; 1 Sears Wal l Gas Heater

1

- -- - - -

RUTLAND FURNITURE R~~~.~~=-··.

..

RANDY BORING (32) has left a Southern High Tornado
would-be l&lt;lckler on the turf behind in this bit of Friday night
action at Eastern . Southern won the game !Hl in an upset.
Picture by Leo Hill.

By
Press International
In the most harsh rhetoric of
the 1972 presidential campaign, Defense Secretary
Melvin R. Laird has accused
Sen. George S. .McGovern of
apparently acting ·•as an agent
of Hanoi " on the issue of
American prisoners of war.
The problem of the prisoners
flamed into prominence in the
contest between President Nix·
on and Democrat McGovern
Sunday when the South Dakota
senator accused Nixo n of
delaying the release of three
U.S. pilols in North Vietnam
for political reasons.
McGovern , appearing in
New York City, called on Nixon
"to let these three prisoners
come horne just as quickly as
possible."
North Vietnam 's news
agency announced that the
three pilots, who were released
with ceremony from prison
Sept. !1, had sent cables to
Nixon asking U.S. authorities
not to interfere with their
return home .
Laird immediately issued a
statement saying it was "a
despicable act of a presidential
candidate to make himself a
spokesman for the enemy ."
"Sen. McGovern apparently
is will ing to act as an agent for
Hanoi in undermining the
rights of American prisoners of
war under the Geneva con.
vention," Laird said.

The defense secretary said it
was the North Vietnamese who
have delayed the return of the
U.S. officers, Air Force Maj.
Edward Elias and Navy Lts.
Markham L. Gar tley and
Norris A. Charles .
Laird said th e U.S. government had had no communications from Hanoi about the
release, and he offe red to send
an American medical evacuation plane to Hanoi "within 24
hours', if there is a transportation problem.
Fra nk Mankiewicz, political

The largest freshman class
in the history of Holzer Medical
Center's School of Nursing
entered the . school today .
Forty-five full time and one
part time slude n~ are being
admitted, bringing the total
number of students enrolled in
the school to 102.
Miss Beren ice Skehan,
director of the sc hool of nur·
sing, sa id UJat she is very
pleased with the interest shown
by the incoming freshmen and
believes the Holzer Medical
Center School of Nursing will
contin ue to grow and maintain
high quality instruction.
. Entering today were : Mrs.
Geraldi ne Dunlap and Mrs.
Susan Smith, Poin t Pleasant:
director for the McGovern
campaign, said a poll taken by
the McGovern organization
showed the gap between the
candidates had narrowed, with
Nixon receiving 54 per cent and
McGovern 34 per cent with 10
per cen t undecided . He said
undecided voters were leaning
2-1 toward McGovern.
But a poll taken by Daniel
Yankelovich Inc. for Time
magazine and The New York
Times showed Nixon had increased his lead by 11 poinls
for a 62 to 23 per cent ad-

Mrs .
Shirley
Hodges, Connie Radford, Pomeroy;
Gallipolis; Mrs. Donna Rose Patricia Kinder, Northup ;
and Mrs. Mary Lou Stifner Rhea Dean, Athens; Susan
1th e part time student), Wiseman and Julia Rice,
Jackson ; and Mrs. Martha • Parkersburg; Nancy Tippens,
Wi lloc k, Athens; Rebecca Belpre, and Rhonda Merrow,
Stump, Ida Ma e Mills, Marietl&lt;l .
Margaret Ehman and Nancy
From the Portsmouth Lease, Gallipolis; Jo Ellen Ironton area are Kim Moses,
Burnett, Kanaug a; Dia ne Mamie McNeer, Nancy Lyon,
Bonecutter, Gallipolis Ferry;
Terry Daughtery and Linda
Lou Putney, Point Pleasant ;
Roxanne Wallis and Jill
Harris, Mason .
Susan Copley, Thurman ;
Joan Buck, Peggy Leach and
Sandra Terry , Jackson; Anna
The first nine students to
Jackson and Debra McCoy,
Oak Hill ; Connie Grueser and graduate from the Medical
Laboratory Te chnician
Program conducted jointly by
vantage. The Yankelovich Rio Grande College and Holzer
survey was based on in- Medical Center have passed
terviews with 2,239 registered th eir National Registry
voters in 16 key states between Examination.
The two-year program
Aug . 25 and Sept. 12. It also
in September, 1970 with
started
indicated Democratic voters
favor Nixon over McGovern 43 the firs t year consisting of
classroom work at Rio Grande
per cen t to 40 per cent.
College . The fo llowing year the
students co mpleted the
practical phase of the program
George McGovern is not at Holzer Medical Center's
my savior.
laboratory.
- Leslie Bacon, the 2U·year- After graduating last May ,
old Atherton. Calif.. anU· the nine students received an
war activist, at Miami Associate Degree from Rio
B eac h.

Judith McGo~ney and Peggy
.Saunders; Carla I;!urns,
Ashland·, Ky.; · Susan. SheetS,
Parma ~ Karen Sue Bmi.th and
.Jane Cochran, Chillicothe;
Kathy Ricke tts, columbus;
Janet Sieg le, Waterloo;
Deborah
Peters, · • · .New
Plymouth ; and Janei WoOdward , Waterford.

9 MLTP Students Pass

Registry Examinations
Grande and took the National
Registry Examination given
by the American Society of
Clinical Pathologists .
The examination scores have
been returned to Holzer
Medical Center and all nine
students passed, making them
all
registered
Medical
Laboratory Technicians.
Students
taking
the
exam in ation were ; Ca th y
Berry, Ga llipolis~ Jay Chose,
Jackson; Jani e Cobb, Pt.
Pleasant : Joyce Davis,
Nelsonville ; Teresa Dearth,
Nelsonville ; Cindy Howard,
Nelsonville; Marlene Johnson,
Pomeroy ; Jack Long, Albany;
and Vicki McCain, Oak Hill.

•

250,000 Ohioans Receiving

Built to last, b·eautifully.

EMK Dear Friend Letter
COLUMBUS (UP!)- An estim ated quarter-million
Ohioans are on the receiving
end of a four-page letter from
Sen . Edward M. Kennedy
Invoking the names of his
brothers on behalf of Sen.
Geor ge S. McGovern and
askin g for campaign contributions.
Richard Sklar, in charge of
McGovern's Ohio campaign,
said the "McGovern MillionMember Club" in Washington,
has sent about 200,1100 copies of
the letter into Ohio, culling
names from va rious mailing
lists.
In addition, 50,000 copies of
the letter are being circulated
within the state through the 23
congressional districts.
Kennedy's "Dear Friend"
letter, on his Senate st&lt;ltionery,
is accompanied by an application asking for $25
(Sponsor ), $10 (Friend), $5(1
(Patron ) or $100 (Angel).
There is another category
marked "Whatever you can
send."
, The appllcation notes the
contribution can be tax
deductible. Also included is a
self-addressed envelope with a
first-class postage penni!. II is
suggested on the back,
however, that a generous donor
would save the club eight cents
by attaching his own stamp.
"In the heat of the campsign," writes Sen. Kennedy,
every presidential election
always seems the most important in our history. I feel
that way about George
McGovern, just as I felt that
way about John Kennedy in

1960."
This election is important,
Kennedy explains, because
"our nation faces the greatest
crisis since the depths of the
Great Depression in 1932,
before Franklin Roosevelt took
command to give us new heart
and hope.
"This time the crisis is less
visible, more subtle, and therefore perhaps more dangerous
than In 1932," the senator
writes. "There .are no breadlines on tbe street, no appleJIIIleni to remind us dally of the
emergency we face. I.ndeed,
lbe superficial observations of
1 vllltor from abroad might be
1111t Ill Is well In the wealthiest
-lry ln the world.
·

"But beneath the deceptive
there is a slow, con~
stant, deadly erosion of the
national confidence and concern for each other that has
marked America as a great
civilization."
Kennedy places the blame
"squarely on the doorstep of
Richard Nixon," and goes on to
det&lt;lil what he calls failures of
the President to end the war
and reduce unemployment.
" These serious errors of
judgment by President Nixon
nakedly expose a characteristic of his leadership which
our nation can no longer afford
- his apparent indifference to
genuine moral and human
values," Kennedy writes .
" It was ind ifference to the
moral anguish of so many of
our people that cause him to
stay inside the While House
s urface~

and watch a football game
when hundreds of thousands
thronged to Washington to
protest his escalation of the
war. "
Kennedy cites what he calls
other instances of indifference
and
th en
describes
McGovern's ."quality of
caring."
He notes President Kennedy
named McGovern director of
food for Peace, and that McGovern worked with Roher!
Kennedy on a study of starvation and malnutrition.
Then comes a prediction that
McGovern can upset Nixon.
Last comes the pitch for
money.
"Whether you can only give
$5 or can afford $1,1100, you can
play a part in this historic
opportunity. Won't you join us
in th is great endeavor'"

AUTHORIZED DEALERS

~}CHRYSLER
"""" MOTORS CORPORATION

Pilots Prefening
Civilian Company
TOKYO (UPI)- Three U.S.
pilots freed from prison in
North VIetnam do not want to
fly home with American
military escorts, th e Vietnam
News Agency said today.
A VN A news dispatch from
Hanoi monitored in Tokyo said
that the pilots sent separate
cables to President Nixon
Saturday requestil\g that U.S.
authorities refrain from Interfering with their trip home.
The pilots were Maj. Edward
K. Elias, of Valdosta, Ga.,
Navy Lt. (Jg) Markham L.
Gartley of Dunedin, Fla., and
Navy Lt. (jg ) Norris A. Charles
of San Diego, Calif. They were
re leased May 17 to the
American antiwar group now
on a visit to North Vietnam.
ln Washington, Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird accused Hanoi of making ''propaganda tools" of the pilots and
their rela~ves In the North
Vietnamese capital. Noting
that North Vietnamese officials three weeks ago
promised to release the three
pilots, Laird said the Communists were stU! making the
men ''pllrade around" Hanoi
and "they are even llling the

families of these prisoners of
war as propaganda tools at this
particular time."
The American group had
been expected to leave Hanoi
Saturday on a flight bound for
Vientiane, but they were not on
the plane when it landed. U.S.
antiwar activists with the
group said . North Vietnam
chose a different route, apparently
fearing
U.S.
authorities In Laos would try to
''kidnap" the fliers.
The VNA said that the pilots
in their cables assured their
families and President Nixon
of "tbelr good health and good
spirits and their desired intention to be accompanied,
without interference, by their
civilian escorts, including the
Rev. WiJUam Sloan Coffin Jr.,
Prof. Richard Falk, David
Dtillinger and Cora Weiss."
It was not known when the
pilols planned to leave Hanoi
for tbe United States but Elias
said in a cable to his wife in
Georgis that he might return
home "possibly Thursday."
Charles' wife, Olga, and
Gartley's mother, Minnie Lee
Gartley, are with the pilots in
Hanoi.

CHRYSLER

Plymoutfi

THAT·'S THE JOY OF IT
TOM RUE Mo·rORS
399 SOUTH 3rd AVE.

MIDDI.fPORT, 0.

•

••

Rutland '·

I

I

)

l

\

�•
10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pom ~roy, 0., Sept. 25, 1~72

BRUCE BIOSSAT

Reeds ville News, Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ruth
recently honored Mr: and Mrs.
Carl Buckley with an anniversary dinner. Other guests
included . Mrs. Alice FouUy,
Mr. and Mrs. Rome Sandy,
Mrs. Lawrence Rose and Mr.
and Mrs. Garrett Reed.
Mrs. Mamie Buckley and
Mrs. Vema Rose visited with
Mrs. Eunice Sprague at the
Arcadia Nursing Home at
CooiVtne.
Mrs. Nell Wilson and Mrs.
Dorotha Riebel were recent
visitors of Mrs. Shellie Petty at
Christian Anchorage Nursing
Home at Marietta.
Mrs. Effie Hauber attended
the wedding of Anita Bond anq

Bad Everywhere

McGJs Corner
1

1

Has Red Flasher
Blll'CE IIIOSS1\1'

ll_1

W-IS III NGTOI\ 1NEAI

Bu o~ tld 1)\ ,:; uw! ' r o\\tl . S('ll t;enrgt• .\1d~ow m on the
road r~ riH't'! lull\· -..1~ lPt: ill's "t urned tlu• cur·ner '' in hi s

b~1tt k• lor II~·· J•lo._·:-rd, 111' 1\nt . 1 ' IH'l'h ol about a thit'd of
th e ~t~k, i'ltldu, l' ),. ·L,ll'l, d: . . rnal report s o n his
camp~ it!ll

So n~ t' Dt·rtl·H ''.th ',\J'" ~ 1 .t\~' vt·tl ;r llo1 k of pn\ ;ltl' polb
CU\Pnrr g ltldl '.' n:dr•, rriu;i] .J,rlt ~ :-~:1' l 'h·~ iJI' I' th • \'a st~lting
for Mdio' L'l n - \-\ (T:-, r· 1!' •tllll t' l'iL'i\'S tl wn Uw :14 -point

sprcnd shuwn 111 till' puhl1 c r :d lh rp &lt;111d 1/ ~JITi:-; pol ls.
All .nfilll..'!dral H(•pt tblt• ~'' '·,\Ji ll ;w, (''&gt;'&gt; \ 11 Sl lllii&lt;Jr priva t e
GOP pull ~ 1 L'JWI t ~ Ow .~ ; ! lll l' !!1111 ~~ 1'ht• n w rl!l!lS lo1 P rcsJdt'lll :"JiX1•JI fJ\l'l I\Jvi;d\•' rl l ;d \' :-ill li'LI Sfil llt.! lJ IJl party

kmh.•r:-:

!ti ld 11 l1:nd

A~ &lt;HI t'"Xi.ll llpl\'

!•"'·'·'

.~ rll&lt;lt •rtt

crati(' nuJJ ,i t•l''-' II\

Just Received! Big Shipment

d ~)li to :?:.~

Nubon~ •·x:J•··! · \J. 1;,1\('111 lo I:JI,f' Okl:lhoma. wh ich
h a~ _been :.;u HJL: l tt•ptihltl&lt;~ tl v•• ll !-i 1S i e n1l ~ 111 !'!'&lt; 'Pill pre si-

dcn t wl dcl't H111 ·

ti le

d S .~ t:H '[!P J"itl~.
111 ~~ tl'll•pho tH· sut·vev as 1
l •JJil:l lt ' lt! w·.l '-~'' ;J s t'uni s ll-

,\ J\!:1r.vl.111d 11 •'

111 , , ,,

1 .1

di~·.:l s l tT art•a bv

,t

(;on•rrr "

·

1 ti11J"- dl' :.;t ·r i iH•s

Mc -

lfw srm!lo r 's

l"a J IJ]J&lt;~J g n

·It'.~ IIH' d t~'H'I•·dt 1 rr1•:.'i', l\ t· L' \t·t

~l'i·n

Thl'n• an·
cle!'eclit)[l&lt;.; :Ill P\• r lht• jol.ut· \ld ,U\I' J'II \ (')'\' td. Con 1t•
hLllllC', .\11\f'l IL.I. 1~11·1 ;1 !f,t'llll" •:· Cl ~ l o"~l/1 , 11 s d lanH•Jll "
This !Jmno:I \l'leran !! h~t'l\!'r 1n ~ ; l, ~~·Ja .
'' M cGti\'L'l'IJ s.t, :-. 1;e••r ·1~1 l'i tH H' td l11s l&gt;c Jt1le gr ouncl
S1(J 1l':i 111 tht· Srti JIIJ . I I" II 1'. lrP';.; 111 lt'ITl hiL• shapl' . ll is
ca nrp;u gn lw r t• i 'i IIH \\oJ 1 tl.rrJ!! , .,.(' rvrr r un inlo
~~ J1 lt':l ... 1

1 Ill J \'1\tllt ·

'J'p:x:rs is t•llf rd tilt· lJ · ·~ •' .t 11''• lilt i\Jc.:GO\t'l ll proplc
con sr.c lt•nt_!y :11 biiV l'.tn lrt• ll tt ' l1 " l"h t·y L' Uli!Jl hupetu !ly on
a bll•11d OJ S11ppo l I rn Ill l ol;H·b ('Jiir·~ltlO'i . llfb&lt;Jn )Jbera Js.
l~tli on _!IH'll sp1 rJ"J t•d it .\ '' ' ):'' ' ''lis lc1hoJ' o r·~~~l ni za tiuns popu I Is l · lllll td~d lr1lk Ill E el. \ t'X.ts and l'ls eWill~n·
A fr _es li l'lH't:l\ I!Jt't't hn\\f'\+'J, d•ws Jttl{ prod tJCL' Si lppo J!
for tlw, lropp Mr . \iJ.~o.••ll 1.~ l ''Hl~!tkred to lw stron gly i n
the IPt1tl 1.'1w J·:,1 c.t Tv\clll~ whn ] I Jt !\ id l' tf ( ;ov . (;f'Or g0
J

\Vctlla cr wrt!J lliLJ di ut I h 11H r·d l •;lrl~ ::; uppurt 111 t ~JtiH ,
udtmll .v sN•m to hL' ll'&lt;liiJil g ,\ It Ni&gt;-.on\ wa). In th;H
ar.L'Q , thr n ty of BC&gt; DI III lunl f avor.-; llw Pn",idC' Ill Dlld li kes
Vrc e l' n· ~ Jdenl Agnrw c\t'll !Jette r.
Amo11 g tlt l' Hortht'l'll br ~· sr:l( (•&lt;;, unl\ Ca l rl orn 1~1 at the
mon~ ~:~n ~ ili~PCill"S I n oflrr i\old ;nvcrn rnuc li prom ise. By
pollulfllcatlorl and ut!Jt~ J obS('I \'L.IIiorJ. ~lr .\J ixon is a hpad
in tlw sJ:I IC' todn y But ('a!i/l;rnta is 11otrniouslv vola tile .
Mr . Nixrm' . .: ~ ~~rp n rl 1, th•! 1 tJ..ht 1(1 ht • t'.'&gt;Jlf&gt;Ct8 !! _~ : soft. and
o m • pr :KIIL{'d llh o.:t•nt•r ··.11 d. "I c',lll "' 't ' llow he cou ld lo!je
i l ..
AI th i!'J writ lll)..: I ,1n1 ·.ldl kwk (iH'I k u1~ on thr. other

bi g "&gt;l &lt;ll• 's Nv\I'JIIrt·v'.~. 'i t'111Ji t: &lt;Jsldl' r\-l ~s:..: ;rclll t sett !-i as
c hara l"IPI isli L_cdh J 1, nt •L"l ,t!J1.. 1 IIl ii ti d i\lr . .r-..l 1xo n lt~ adl/J g
C\'~' r)WIJ rl r. JJJ t· !JJdJn ~ til l' 11\ lr( r .~!&lt;Ill'~ llr1111phn·y wun in
19()8- ~&lt;.&gt; W ) ork P t' lll h\ I\ &lt;t l'J.J, \ l u.· ll q~:l /1 .
M~ q tl"\L'.I ~ ~~ l!~( · s r ~ \h ( ;tt \'PI"Il ~ ~S t il l nut well off in
pl:lces whl''.'' lw rJ'J~ht !11 IJ,·. "-IIl ii :1s ~1i1 J f1CS ()ta tg~Jini n g
but not .' Tt L:1u)dr. /0 111de I'\I:J11d l lf'!Tlblc J. J I~:JWalt t bad
divisrons 1 • \rr sn n J"- 11 1 ;\it f,.,., , n r ovll'r::t tt&gt;Jl. Washin gton
stnte 1supptJrt \\·l' ~'~ 1'1111::., 1
·
Mct ;O\ P/"!1 S t'l 1 ~ .'i11Illl'!llJ11~' In rgll l l'J' than &lt;ill thi s
around ll1at curn&lt;•r 1,,. "~'\ ~ It''"' t i P rn•d lw most hm ('
infrJ -rrd \'1:-1 ' ' 11 I C&lt;lll 't find 11

rr

I ~E'WS f&gt;APE R

£NH'l.PR IS[ A5Stl 1

v,~ tera us 1\h· mori&lt;.~l Uu ~ vital

More than

,\lJ~Il SS ION~

SATURDAY

0 . J. (: ~wl , Had t t~": IJ(:IVJd

-

Gri ncbtufl ,
Tay lor,

H&lt;lr int•: l.t' r•rri t·

150 Reds

San nt ·~·

Hutl:111d:

Sa lscl', lia('llll' Allan 1-\ unyt•J t.
Athens.

SATU!\D.\\' lJJS('J L\ Bt :f.'S
-

fl azt&gt;l

,\r.nvlf,•
Kn1 ~ht. Ha,kPII \V hil&lt;·.
h
McCian1, Uil\'!d (;r uJUsr.tJI.
Kar£!n Br olh E.'rs , i\l.tn~tln·t

Sn11 1h,

n,., ,,,

Mabd Wulfi:. ~lili'IOf'l{" I hint.
Al1£~n H un~ on. Lrl J"l'lt ~J l':u:kt·lt,

ARTIST IllES
CIN('JN NATI r!' Pl

&gt;

Harold N:1sh . a
known ili'IIS! \\ho

H;Jt

run. ill\

sr-I

up Lht·

Uni ven:illy

C ill ('lfll•&lt;~ll

of

cc ramtr.'i

dt P&lt;H'1JHl'J.l
years ago. dil'd SunL.i&lt;t,\

!J
1!t·

News.

••

U. S. Near Zero

Are Killed
S,\ ]t ;( &gt;\

1

Ul'll

Allied

Growth Of
Population
WASHJ NGTON I UPI ) - A

AI the airport the group was met by three officials of the North
Vietnamese Embassy in Peking and a Viet Cong diplomatic
representative.The group was taken to the Chien Men Hotel in
Peking, not far from the Chinese capital's famous Tien An Mien
Square.
All of the prisoners said they elated at being released, but
expressed regret that their fellow prisoners were still in cap.
tivity.

~ow YQu Know

Umted Si.&lt;tles may be nearing a
poi nt

of

•

The mechamcal hare usea in
greyh ound racing was first
tes ted in 1909 at a track in
Tucson, Ariz.

d (•l ilpust ;rl /J a Tu,
:1buu t l~O llllh,s nor!h(•&lt;.J s t of

fn~irlf · r bt1lllh{'~ \\ t.: rc credited
'•IIIII k1llrrH~ :l5 Co tumum st
II Ulljl:; ,111r) klllil" kii i J~ OU t fl\' C

their life times.

The Census Bureau came up
will1 an an ticipated birth rate
each woman,

pected childbearing and actual
births in previOus studies.

Agency officials said the 2. 1
lmth rc1tc eventually would

hw ;r nti .: ~tr·cr~ ft

claims as of July 1, 1972, the
beginning of the fiscal yea r. He
said wha t was owed the sta le
was up $1.6 million from the
same lime 111 1971. Ferguson
said the si.&lt;t te has more than
48,000 clai ms aga inst individual s and companies in

tilt' Cll !llp.
S n tll tl.ar~ · •;&lt;turces ~oi cl

Ohio and other states, an increase of ahout3,000 since June
30, 1971. Most of the claims,

I''" UHWhl Com-

accordin g to Ferguson , were

rrrum.st IJJ IIL'l tr;.mg lo move
l1t, ,,, llOnu n dll l ller~ p1cces
!11 f. tl.! h 1,n•1HHI Sunday in an

for delinquent sales taxes owed
the sl&lt;t te.

ITI!II't;ll

;111d

ji 11'-IIIHII'i (JIJI•ii)t•
1

\tttl'll• .111

ai\(•Jitpt to 'l llcll reoccupied

TEACHER KILLED
OXFORD, Ohio (UP!)
Mrs. Edith Swan, 72, a retired
~··u rtl' s;Hcl t!JP U.S. airmen
school teac her' was round
I ,H i ' l{h :trrn \\lll'd of the
stra ngled in her home
1', IJII!ililtJst
rno\1'
fr om
Saturday
and police said today
pr , Jill 1 .l ii!('II "P~.: dion a nd
th ey were baffled as to a
n'!lt·t 1liltif'1!1:dl1•n Wl' wpre
motive lot· slaying . Money was
h !o•J 1111'111
fpund in the woman's purse,
her home was not ransacked
and there were no signs o:
II&lt; t \ll:n 1~ 11 'If; SET
forced entry.
Quar w 'l t'l t "r h an d destroyed
.1 1 h•;t"-1 :-; 1 ~ orf tl!i' !J1~~ ~:uns. One

II

1

It,·"

I h1 H \Ill I
,tJ tit· lh tiii!Jt

llumecCJming

Chu rch
~~trH I ;I\
\\Tl 1t f'la1rc h a mi
\ur It\ ~i 1,r,1r! tn tile morning

" Hall of our tt·ouhiL c,

( irt tV{'

IIH) d•tllli'l ;1{ J~.;\Q !") ll1 ., a
uHHP

from wattl tng ou t ow11 w.1y

The other hall com"" f• o1"
be ing oliiOwr d to hnvt II '
Be rnq 1111 nh•1. ,, Ji,IJ
(wdll l r• n11 nrjc 1
t'L'I ·•q
po\\'Cr) ., r• •"'II "hr lo
1
to

k

1lh ,

lo

1r

.n1y m••'d yc J ''lo~
ha '-'C
! he
f RI r NL t
ONE S" " I lh~.- ron,. , ,
Cement Blot"- ( o ~dr lf
W E ;( AV [ Nl l·l'l- IT

almost

FOR YOU, WF ll G • 1•
FOR YOU OR HElf' YO t,
0

11: '..:t .. rl· 111 l··llll\\ ;1l 2 p. m .
h 11 ~[" ' lt· fllS:--.1• 11 Br·o thcrs .
! ~~I I I I . . '.\\I&lt; f)l\\{'

·--··- --.
MEIGS THEATRE

MARRIAGE LICENSES
David Keith Ga rdner, 20,
R1rtland, and Wanda Yvonne
Cardill o, t7. La ngsville:
Wllltmn llockford Williams, 21,
Pomeroy Rt. 4, and Terri L.ynn
Ash. t8. Minersv ille: Dennis
.James Carol , 22, Detroit,
Mtch., and Sandra Lee Zerkle,
21. Syraeusc.

I " IPqlll b. l'U('SdJy

O:. cJJ I l S 16

W.1l l D1sney 's

NAPO LEON &amp; SAMA NTHA

nechni color )
Mrrllncl Douglas
\II,' rll

FINO IT".

VC&gt;e r

Also

W.1 11 Dtsney's
IAY ilE iliES OFT HE

DEE P

OisrJcy CMioon: Bc.:~r l v

A !!. lv ~p

Adnl tss ion :
Adutrs l l .lO
C ~iidr en 75c
Show Slarls 7 P.M.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Lady Devon-The Mix Masters!
.\
0

News, Notes

ill'l\\'een lhe ages of 18 to 24
conducted in June that showed
they expected to have an
ave~·•ge of 2.3 children during

fr tdll

rlul'dlt·tlt

0

Housewares Department First Flilor

K uhn Takes

with 50,000 wives

re-s upply, f1eld
$17.3 MILLION DUE
l1'1'' rts s:dd tud(ly .
COLUMBUS t UPI ) - State
\ I·. S \i r Force Cl30 tnws- Auditor Joseph T. Ferguson
port pl ane tricd to parachute said today $11.3 million was
"-! ! pp!it'
!uda )
to one due the state in delinquent
JII'"l'i

Choose your flower bulbs now from the big
selection of tulips, hyacinths, crocus,
narcissus and many others.

BOB KUHN

du:::;wns were based on interv iews

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Pleasant Valley Hospital
DISCHARGES: Mrs . Edward Hughart, Point Pleasant·
Vern Mullens. App le Grove:
Mrs. Okey Roush. Le tart ·
Ronald Bush, Lemi: Fulto~
Spears, Henderson: Mrs.
Cha rles Redman , Point
Pl casnnt; Way lan·d Jones
Haze l Boster, Mrs . Larry
Simpkins, Point Pleasan t ·
Okey Jordan , Henderson, and
Harold Lawson, Letart.

Mr. and Mrs. Harley E.
Johnson took his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Harley T. Johnson to
visit with his sister, Mrs.
Mamie Reuter and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Lovell Blake of
Charleston, W. Va. Mr. and
Mrs. Harley E. Johnson and
family returned on Sunday for
a short visit and to bring his
parents home.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp
and lamily visited Wednesday
evening with Mrs. Vira Barr of
Langsville. Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Barr and children were also
visiting.
Mrs. Harold Gillogly and
Mrs. Clinton Gilkey of Albany
visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Lincoln Russell on Monday .
Mrs. Paul Pierce and lamily
ol Mason are visiting Thursday
with Mrs . Geneva Shwnate and
Mrs . Larry Johnson and
ramily.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Roush and
family of Logan were Sunday
visitors o[ Mrs. Helen Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. William Boyce
of Columbus were weekend
visitors of Mr . and Mrs.
Howard Russell .

GSI Post
Robert W. Kuhn , pastor of
the Pomeroy First Baptist
Church si nce June, 1969, has
accepted employment as a lull·
lime chaplain at the Gallipolis
State Institute .
A member o[ the Middleport.
Pomer oy Rotary Club, of
which he is treasurer, and
presiden t of the Rio Grande
Baphst Association, the Rev.
Mr. Kuhn will contin ue to serve
the Pomeroy First Baptist
Church on a part·lime basis.
The Rev. Mr . Kuhn and his
wile, Bea, have four children ,
David, 23, se rvin g at the
Langley Air Force Base in
Virginia ; Karla, 19, a freshman at Morehead State;
Janelle, 17, a senior al Meigs
High School where she is a
varsi ty che erleader , and
Robin, 15, a sophomore at
Meigs High. The family resides
on Mulberry Ave. in Pomeroy.
P~~w.~mw.::::!*-.:.s:~·

u:

SAIGON (UPI)- The U.S.
command diverted more than
than one-third or the 852 force
In Indochina from targets over
Laos and Vietnam and sent
them on one of the heaviest
raids yet over southeastern
Cambodia, military sources
said today.
The 30-plane strike force
Monday night and today
dumped more than two million
tons of bombs on Communist
base camps just across the
South Vietnamese border,
spokesmen said. U.S. military
authorities fear the Communists may renew their offensive
from the camps within the next
three weeks in a pre-U.S.
election effort.
Command spokesmen also
said Air Force jets demolished
a fuel storage dump outside
Hanoi Monday with laser.
guided bombs and leveled an
area the size of four city
blocks, sending black smoke
rising to 13,000 feet.
fn South Vietnam; government rangers today punched
through a Conununlst ring to
reach a besieged battalion that
had been isolated lor nine days
at the central coast district
town o!Ba To, military sources
said. But 12 miles east of Ba
To , UP! reporter Edward
Bassett said North Vietnamese
troops attacked three outposts
early today at Due Pbo, 300
miles north of Saigon .
F4 Phantom lighter-bomber
pilots struck the La Danh
petroleum storage area 46
miles north or the North
Vietnamese capital for the first
time since President Nixon
April 6 ordered a renewal of
bombing above the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) separating
the two Vietnams, the spokesmen said.
The spokesmen also said !wo
American planes were shot
down at opposite ends or South

..... ,.

Utdted Preas International
WASHINGTON -PRESIDENT NIXON TODAY accelerates
his re-election effort by paying tribute to American Immigrants
- the ancestors of this year's key ethnic vote - and helping to
raise additional millions for his already well-Btocked campaign
coffers.
·
Beginning another of the brief campaign forays he In·
tersperses with his While House duties, Nixon dedicates the new
American Musewn ol Inunlgratlon near the Statue of Liberty In
New York harbor before addressing a $1,000 a plate dinner In
New York City tonight. Following the day in New York, Nixon
Dies to California Wednesday for a luncheon speech In San
Francisco and a dinner speech in Los Angeles. Both are $1,000 a
plate events.
By

By Mrs. Opha Otrutl
Mr. and Mrs. Willard Hines
spent a weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Hines and sons ol
Belpre and attended the Band0-Rama at Marietta on
Saturday. The participating
Belpre High School Band look
first place in show in their class
and tied for second place in the
parade. David Hines, the elder
son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hines
is a band member .
Jerrie Gre~ser of Pomeroy
and Marla Grueser have
returned after spending two
weeks at Myrtle Beach, South
Carolina.
Don Lambert recently was
discharged from service . He
arrived home on his birthday,
Sept. 15.
Ice cream and cake were
enjoyed by several having
birthdays the past week . They
were Robert Paulsen, Gene
Lamber, Don Lambert, Mrs.
Leota Smith, Charles Johnston,
Dick Sargent and Robert
Roush. Others attending were
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Cullwns
and Ginger, Mr. and Mrs.
Doyle Sargent, Mrs. Robert
Roush, Mrs. Charles Johnston
and Erica, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Lambert, Charlotte, Sherry
and David, Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Cullwns, Todd and Heather,
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Midkiff,
Don . Cullums and Duane
Brickles.

Play the match game with these very pair-able pieces from Lady
Devon. You'll look like a winner however you wear them 1
Everything's made of polytron, a machine washable blend of
polyester and ~ntr~n nylon that's all fashion and absolutely no-fuss
eve~. T~e tops m s1zes 38 to 44. The skirt and pants in sizes 30 to 38.You II fmd a large and complete selection of sportswear In regular
and large sizes in our 2nd Floor Ready-to-Wear Department.
SHOP WEEKDAYS 9:30 TO 5:00P.M.
OPEN BOTH FRIDAY AND SATURDAY9:30T09:00P.M.

ELBERFELD$ IN POM

PARIS - HENRY A. KISSINGER, President Nixon's lop
foreign policy adviser, conferred privately with two North
Vietnamese diplomats today In an apparent new attempt to
lreak the stalemate over a VIetnam peace settlement.
The meeting was amounced first by ·the While House.
Neither a presidential spokesman nor Paris representatives of
the two sides would give any detalls, "In accordance with our
agreement with the other side," as While House Press Secretary
Ronald L. Ziegler putlt. It appeared Ukely that Kissinger and the
North VIetnamese negotiators, De Due Tho and Xuan Thuy,
agreed to discuss for the second lime in 11 days a CommiUI!st
statement Sept. 11 that as pari of a_Vietnam peace, ''neither a
Conunun!st regime nor a U. S. stooge regime'' should be imposed
·1n South VIetnam.
NORWOOD, OtnD - PICKEl' LINES AT THE General
Motors Corp. assembly plant here remained up today, bit the
llrlklng United Auto Worken were conceding the longest work
stopping In GM history was 1111 but over,
Atentative contract ap-eement wu hammered out Monday
in Detroit to end the strike that began April 8, Idling 10me 4,000
workers. Its details were not revealed pending ratification.

COWMBUS - 'l1IE PRBIIIDENT OF THE American
Dlr!tal AJIOCiatlon charge!~ lodl7 lhat many of the nation's.
(Continued 111 Jllll 10)

South Vietnamese strike into
Cambodia in 1970. The twl).
month campaign cleared the
Communists !rom the sanctua.
ries in the three provinces, bot
they reoccupied them this fall
and winter.
The -strikes Monday and
today hit just across the border
!rom South Vietnam's Tay
Ninh Province within 75 miles
of Saigon.

··

"A Hell ofa Deal"
Gartley said he would be "glad to get back to the United
States," adding, ''it's a hell of a deal."
All of the members of the group were willing to talk to
newsmen, but Chinese officials who met them at the airport
persistently pushed them ahead to try to gel them away from the
pursuing reporters.
The group which arranged their release is the Committee of
Uaison for U.S. Servicemen Detained in Vietnam.ln addition to
Dellinger, other members or the group are Mrs. Cora Weiss, the
Rev . William Sloane Coffin, and Prof. Richard F.alk.
The members of the group 511id they did not know their travel
schedule out or Peking yet. But it was believed they would leave
Wednesday morning on a Chinese civil airct·art flight to Irkutsk
in the Soviet Union where they would transfer to a Soviet Aeroflot
passenger plane which would lake them to Moscow.
If they take this route, they would be scheduled to arrive in
Moscow in late afternoon Wednesday, Moscow time.

Weather

.We~s-Mwon

Cooler tonight, likely. Low
tonight in the upper 50s to the
lower 60s. Variable cloudiness,
cooler Wednesday. Hig hs in the
mid 60s.

Area

PHONE 992-2156

ases

TEN CENTS

aste

Military sources said the
$5,000 "smart" bombs that hit
the La Danh facility were
directed against 60 partially
buried storage tanks each
containing 5,000 gallons or fuel.
Pilots said they could not make
a
complete
damage
assessment because heavy
smoke from " numerous"
seco ndary explosions
(Continued on Page 10)

Truck Purchased
Middleport Village Council,
acting upon the recommendation of the Board of
Public Affairs, accepted the
bid or Darryl Stumbo on a used
three-quarter ton, lour-speed,
1911 truck.

Purcha se price or the vehicle
is $2,500. Also bidding were
Goebel Ford and Rawlings and
Sons Motor Co. However, it
was reported th at neither
company met specilications.
Council gave a third reading

D()_uhle Safety
Record Scored
Ohio Valley Elec tric Corporation and its subsidiary
company, Indiana-Kentucky
Electric Corporation, scored a
double
salety
record
achievement over the past two
days.
As of Sunday noon, Sept. 24,
the company at its three major
locations recorded a total or
one million man-hours worked
without a disabling injury. AI
midnight Monday , September
25, OVEC's Kyger Creek Plant
near Gallipolis, Ohio, com·
pleted a lull calendar year
without a lost-time accident.
It was the fourth time in the
company's relatively young
history (full-scale operation in
1956) that the achievement of

one million man-hours of work
without a disabling injury had
been attained. The last time
was in February , 1970. Helping
to complete the record were
the 290 employees or the Kyger
Creek Plant, the 349 employees
at Clifty Creek Plant at
Madison, Ind ., and the 11
em ployees of the System
Headquarters Division near
Piketon, Ohio.
It was also the fourth lime in
the history of Kyger Creek
Plant that employees there
completed a lull-year or work
without a disabling injw-y .
of
the
Commenting
achieveme nt, Plant Manager
L. R. Ford, Jr., had this to say:
(Continued on Page 10)

Concrete Needed

. .

ews .• in Briefi

ROCK SPRINGS

Vietnam. One of the pilots was
known killed and the other
oflicially listed as missing in
action.
Command spokesmen said
the B52s on the Cambodian
mission hit base camps in
Kampong Cham, Prey Veng
and Svay Rieng Provincesjump-&lt;~!! points for attacks on
Saigon and Tay Ninh lor live
years before the joint U.S.·

tan

the same as anywhere.'\

enttne

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1972

••

11

•

at y

VOL XXIV NO. 114

zer o population

produce " population of fixed

1\ HII"I'

Plant Dutch Bulbs Now!

f~ru wth.

The agency sa id its con-

Elias, from Little Rock, Ark., was the onty one not accom·
vanied by a relative. Asked how he felt about being [reed, he
replied, "I'm elated, or course. But I'm thinking about the people
back there."
When asked how many prisoners were in his camp, Elias 1
answered, "I'm afraid that's something 1should not talk about."
Asked about his plans for the future, and particularly whether
he would remain in military service, Elias said, "I'll stay in the
Air Force. Why not ?"
Charles, who was accompanied by his wife Olga, appeared in a
more relaxed and happy mood than the others.
"I'm overwhelmed at being released. I don 't know what to
say," he said.
Charles' wife carried a box containing a chess set she had
purchased lor him during one of their tours around Hanoi
following the prisoners' release.
Charles said that when they walked through Hanoi's streets,
people were aware that they were American pilots who had been
engaged in bombing North Vietnam. But he said the reaction was

Devoted To The Interests O(The

Wolfpen

young wives showed today tile

stze. But they cautioned that
the projection was subject to
unknow n vana bles and was at
best of only limited reliability .

[

olprr1

the capital of China's Kwangsi Province which borders on North
Vietnam, before flying to Peking today.
Both at the airport and at their Peking hotel, Chinese officials
trled to prevent them from talking with newsmen. Dellinger did
not elaborate on why they had come to China.
There was speculation that the group switched to the China
route for fear that U.S. authorities in Vientiane would take the
prisoners there and ship them hack to the United States by
military aircraft, a move that might endanger the release of
other U.S. POWs held by North Vietnam .

For A Lovelier Spring

d uldbeanng expectations of

( 'llt ll nrlll11-.ts 111 l"t.'ll tnd coast

krJ!1•d

·!t':ll \"J!;Ji li11~h·.r ay 1 befor e
!hi' .qr p!'(t;rt · hinJ~ t t~im· :-:il'ason
r·uh () I! kn g•Jr&lt;'rnmcnt out-

was 16.

30,000

PEKING (UP!) - Three American prisoners of war released
by North Vietnam arrived in Peking today on their way home.
The leader of a U.S. antiwar group that flew to Hanoi to get the
trio said the Peking trip was "arranged" for them.
Originally the released POWs and theii- relatives and compa·
nio1111bad been expected to leave Hanoi and return to the Unib!d
States by way of Laos. But plans were suddenly changed and
their itinerary was switched to return them home via China and
Moscow. They are expected to arrive back in the United States
Thw-sday night.
David Dellinger, a member of the Chicago Seven and leader of
the antiwar group that went to Hanoi to gel the men, told
newsmen who asked why they had come to China, "It wasn't in
our hands. Someone arranged it."
The three men, released !rom prison eight days ago, were Air
Force Maj. Edward K. Elias, Navy Lt. Markham L. Gartley and
Navy Lt. Norris A. Charles. Gartley's mother and Charles' wife
were members of the group traveling with the POWs.
The group left Hanoi Monday and stayed overnight in Nanning,

Cen.-.us Bw·cau survey of the

t!J;ll\ 50

fdii"P::i

in -Briefs

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook Wednesday through Friday:
Fair Wednesday and
Thursday wlth a chance of
showers Friday. Slow
warming with highs in the
lower 70s and lows In the
upper 40s and lower 50s.

makin g adjustments for dif-

S:11grrn, btrt \1 i11d::; rWT!ed th e
r·;rq'.o IJt'llind Communi::; t lines,
llif' r c·porls &gt;;aid But allied

W llli : un.'-'

FIREMEN CALLED
The Middleport Fire Dept.
was called Saturday at 8 p. m.
to the corner of Page and Park
Sts. , where lightning had
IConttnued from Page I )
proposals already have been rejected several times by both struck a power pole and se t a
houses or Congress. But he said everyone who has studied the fuse box on fire. Sunday at 4:34
a. m. the E-R squad was called
national debt situation knows taxes must go up.
·'The question is whether it will be raised by tax reform . lo 550 South Third St. for Mrs.
- taxing those Americans who through loopholes escape A. B. Ray who was taken to
pa ying lheir [air sha re of taxes, or by raising the taxes or the Holzer Medical Center .
already overburdened average taxpayer, " Nelson said. "The
administration by promising no tax increase is playing pollical
The berries of the mistle·
games with the American people."
toe are poisonous to man.

of 2. 1 children for

IIJ'h!u ~~ ;md bP~:1fl &lt;I push to

Stanley,
l'tll llt'l'lli:
RH.:Iia rd Hathbur n. '\1id
die po r t: Dr•rothy i\ rr1iliJJI\
Midd [(•pfrrl , .Jul11t '\111• 11'•'
Pum e r u~, 1 (rrr• lta Br&gt; l'. l t•;..
Neu- II H\1..' 11: ]);ut;t \lr r'·111r
Long Bottom
SUNIJJ\ \' DISCH AHt ;J·.S
Jo('

SOUTIIERN JUNIOR VARSITY CHEERLEADERS are l.r, Rhonda West, Megan Brown
and Debbie Roush. Absent was Ronda Ash.

ferem:es noted between ex-

Fields, Hex Arg&lt;tbn te.
SU"'O,\Y MJMlSSIO:\.&lt;;

1\lar.\·

American POWs in PekiJtg; Next Stop Moscow

J•f11 1 IJ:'tll•

Sai d i.Hl ]11 1,\ :1 plllll l' l.t:J
"T I Ii ~ &lt;.. I,JIP .1/lt•li ld h1· d· r·,;nl·d

Goorgid

DUTCH FLOWER BULBS

\ • 1 .t ]'"ll spl e ,td uJ (jO tu J5 111 fa\ m· of

J\.Jr 1\ilXOil h..t'i lU ),,,pill ,j,,\~11
\Vhp n ~·ou 11111 lh l' l" :, 111,1p
lw vc JUSt dnnP \"Oil vi'L ,,, 11 1t"

in g 11s

David Hall at lbe Eden Church.
Mr. and Mrs. J.D. Hayman
visited with Mr. and MrsWilliam Gardner of DUncan
.Falls, Sunday. Mrs. aardner
w~ the former Cecil Brain of
the Dultts Run area.
Mr. and Mrs. Llnloul
John90nandMr.andMrs.J. D.
Hayman attended a hymn sing
at the Eagle Ridge Church
Saturday evening when the
Duncan Family of Tampa,
Fla., were featured. They are
fonnerly from Eagle Ridge.
IN TRAINING
Alpha Smith Is a patient at
Connie Radford, Jill Harris
the St. Joseph Hospital,
and
Connie Grueser left today
Parkersburg.
for nurses training at Holzer
Mrs. Bess Larklrui spent
Sunday · with her daughb!r, Medical Center.

](I)!, J,r'\ 1

1!1

th ~~ hd \l' ;, pt t•lt.\

pri\',lt L' ]'oil lllt-r~._·

l/1(· 111
.u. 11 ti ll' \k~;,J\L'Ill lorll':i think
't·•ld -.;h(l t ·•t loW~l. a n.:'S J)I)Ilc:iib lc
!\IJ \jxo n !Padtng t h~.: Demu-

Mrl. Doril ..... flll'helter.
Mr. IIICI Mn. John Riebel
and chlldren of Pomeroy R. D.,
were recent vl.lllon of Mr, and
Mrs. D. C. Riebel. A deccraled
blrthdaycakewaspresentedto
Mrs. D. c. Riebel by the John
Riebel family. Other guests
Included Mr. lind Mrs. Wayne
Prince of I.Mg Bottom.
!\ln. BW Orr Is a patient at
_St. Joseph Hospital.
-Mn. Lyle Balderson

Anyone for donating a yard'
A yard or concrete, that is.
The Middleport Fire Dept.
is appealing for concrete to be
used in a service pad area at
the rear of its new fire
department headquarters and
a driveway from the rear of the
building onto Fourth Ave.
Bob Byer, lire chief, said
Monday 35 yards of concrete
are needed to complete the
area. The concrete was
stri cken from the original
plans due to costs. Volunteer

labor now will do the work
involved in making the service
pad area and driveway.
Total cost of a yard or concrete will be $20. With 35 yards
needed, the concrete area will
run $700, using volunteer labor.
Everyone wishing to con·
tribute a yard, or even a part of
a yard of concrete, is asked to
contact Byer, Pete Kloes or
telephone their intentions to
Middleport Village Hall. The
liremen have set a 3iklay goal
lor raising the contributions.

.
and accepted a new ordinance
which sets the rate to be
charged by the village in
hauling away refuse lor
residents other than garbage.
Under no condition will gar·
bage be accepted, -officials
have stated. The legislation
was passed in order to provide
revenue for the village hauling
away refuse not acceptable by
garbage collectors, it was
reported .
Maintenance Supervisor
Harold Chase said a number of
signs denoting speed, children
playing and other subjects
have arrived and are ready for
pla cement. Chase was
requested to be advised by
police when any emergency
occurs to any utility . He
pointed out that damages to
power lines, particularly by
fire, can damage village
pumps, motors and lilt
stations. It was agreed that
police will notily him or any
incidents which might result in
any damages to such equip·
ment.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor John Zerkle, Chiel of
Police J . J. Cremeans , Clerk·
Treasurer Gene Grate and
council members, Mrs. Roger
Mor ga n, David Ohlinger,
Lawrence Stewart, Fred
Hoffman , William Walters and
Dick Vaughan. Council moved
into executive
session
lollowing a short session.

, 'II
MEIGS DELEGATES - Southern High School at Racine was among more than teo tM:hoola
in Dhio participating in the 7th amual Youth and Science Conference held at Mershon
Auditoriwn on The Ohio Stale University campus, Saturday, September 23. Delegates !rom
Meigs County attending were, L to R, Elisa McMWan, Connie Roush, Vickie Johnston and
Carla Salser, math teacher. Host for the group was Thereon Johnson or the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District, a member of the Ohio Agrlcultural Council from Pomeroy. The
more than 1500 youths focused attention on new developments and heard several distinguished
scientists speak on career opportunities. Sponsors of the conference were the College of
Agriculture and Home Economics, The Ohio State University, and the Ohio Agricultural
Council.

Talk Range Wide

PEKING (UP! ) - Chinese
Premier Chou En-lai and ~::~:~:::::::::::o:::;:::::::;.-*=x:::.~:m!:~~i:::!~:£:~:;.~:::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::
I
Japanese Prime Minister ~
Kakuei Tanaka held wideranging discussions today in
their efforts to bring about
TOKYO (UPI) - The Nationalist Chinese
normalization
of SinoNavy today seized a Japanese fishing boat in
Japanese relations.
the South China sea, the Maritime Safety
The talks took place on the
second day of Tanaka's stay in
Agency reported. The seizure occurred on the
Peking, a visit which has 90
second day of Japanese Prime Minister Kakuei
impressed the Japanese leader
Tanaka's visit to Peking to normalize relations
that he wrote a poem on his ~;; with China.
impressions or China.
~
The Maritime Safety Agency said the ~
Japanese sources said that
the second round or talks be- ,. Japanese vessel had a crew of t6. It gave no i*
tween Tanaka and Chou ~- further details except to identify the vessel as ~
resulted in a "very !rank ex· ~ the 47-ton Hocho Maru, a tuna fishing boat.
AT LANCERS
~
change of views."
A football schedule
The sources said the two ;.;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::-.:::::::::::::::~:i!!::&amp;3!!:!:!:!:~::::::~~::!:&amp;:~~~:;::;;;;:::::::::..-.::::
correcllon announced
Monday for Eastern Higb
leaders discussed "very
School affects tbe away·
seriously" each of the Japanese summit conference Japan and Taiwan and a forgame Ibis coming Friday,
' 'proble!Dlt" which face China is ''proceeding smoothly" in mal declaration of an end to the
The schedule now calls for
and Japan In their relations, the spirit of reaching war between China and Japan.
Eastern lo play at Federal
but the sources declined to agreement on issues of com·
Chou bas insisted that Japan
Hocking, not at Cadiz.
specify what the problems are. mon Interest.
could not maintain diplomatic
The Cadiz game is moved
The sources said the mood of
Tanaka arrived In Peking ties with Taiwan once China
baek to Oct. 14.
the talks remained " very Monday, the first Japanese and Japan agreed to normalize
warm and cordial," despite the premier in office to visit China. relations.
President Chiang Kai-llhek's
wide·ranging topics which · He told his Chinese hosts that
covered bilateral and in· Japanese aggression against Nationalist Chinese governlemational relations.
China before and during World ment has threatened to take
Tanaka was 90 elated by the War n was ''regrettable" and "all necessary actions"
cordiality of his first meeting a cause for deep self. against Japan if the Tokyo
off the ground. He staled that with Chou that he wrote a poem examination and reHection government abrogated the 1952
Kermit Walton and Earl Ingels expressing his sentiments . which he himself was un. peace treaty it signed with the
Taiwan regime.
had agreed to help with the Tanaka disclosed the poem dergoing.
during
an
early
morning
Both
Chou
and
Tanaka
ex·
Tanaka
and
FQreign
promotion.
Also discussed was the lack meeting with intimate friends pressed optimistic views on the Minister Masayoshi Ohira said
of interest shown in chamber among the Japanese press normalization of relations before they left for Peking that
between Peking and Tokyo,- but the ties between Tokyo and
meeting attendance. It was corps.
Olief
Cabinet
Seer&amp;.
they
were stm confronted with Taipei would be severed if
Japan
's
suggested that perhaps a
tary
Susumu
Nikaido
told
such
key issues as the existing China and Japan establlslted
program could be offered at
meetings along with guest newsmen today the Sino· dlplcmatic relatiODB between ' diplomatic relations.
speakers to create more in·
teres!.
Kerr noted that Don Pearch
who was elected as one of the
new directors for a two year
Prellident Nllun today began Republican nomination for retenn had declined to accept. By United Pren Inlernatloul
With
one
public
opinion
poll
hla
~nd campaign trip In election and Uke the other two
Named to flU the post was
:showing
Sen.
George
S.
Me·
five days to a populous state- was IICheduled to be brief, the
Dennis Keney.
Attending were Kerr, Henry Govern gaining on President New York. The President went White House said.
Cleland, Richard Chambers, C. Nixon, the Democratic pres- to Texas last Friday . He
Despite the swings to New
E. Blakeslee, Fred Crow, Bob Idential candidate ·campaigned planned to stump through York and later California, the
White House said, the
Jacobs, Jack Carsey, Dennis with Sen. Hubert H. Hwnphrey CaUfornia Wednesday,
through defense-oriented West
Today's trip was only Prellident would not be among
Keney and Tom Cassell.
Coast stales.
Nlmn'alhlrd IIDce be Wlll the
(Continued on page 10)

!! Fishing Boat Seized

I

ij

.

Otamber Election Expected
Actions to elect a president,
hire a secretary and plan the
annual Chrislmas promotion
were taken by the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce
Monday at noon in the Meigs
Inn.
Jack Kerr, president, said he
had round it difficult to set up a
meeting with directors who
elect the president. However,
Monday the directors were
contacted and a meeting was to
be held today at noon at the
Meigs Inn to elect a new
president and discuss hiring a
secretary for the chamber
office located on the ground
floor of the court house.
Asecretary was provided - ~
chamber through funds
_allocated through ~ Com.
munlty Action Program
(CAP). However, the federal

runds for the program are
exhausted, forcing the closing
' office .
or the Chamber
Chamber members are
considering hiring a secretary
and paying her a salary with
chamber funds. A secretary is
" very · valuable" to the
chamber, members said .
Duties oullined for the
secretary were collecting
membership from local
merchants and assisting with
the
annual
Christmas
promotion.
Richard Chambers reported
that there was approximately
$1100 in the Regatta fund. Kerr
is to contact Marge Hoffner to
see what money is .in the
chamber account.
Kerr noted that it was time to
.get the Christmas promotion

Polls also Arguing

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